WT

Lion

2016 · Directed by Garth Davis

🧘22

Woke Score

69

Critic

🍿79

Audience

Based

Critics rated this 47 points above its woke score. Among Based films, this critic score ranks #165 of 345.

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Synopsis

A five-year-old Indian boy gets lost on the streets of Calcutta, thousands of kilometers from home. He survives many challenges before being adopted by a couple in Australia; 25 years later, he sets out to find his lost family.

Consciousness Assessment

Lion presents itself as a redemptive narrative of cross-cultural adoption, centering the journey of an adult man reuniting with his biological Indian family. The film does feature substantial Indian representation through its supporting cast and childhood sequences, offering glimpses of street life and poverty in Calcutta that carry documentary-like weight. Yet the story's emotional architecture relies fundamentally on white Australian rescue, with Nicole Kidman and David Wenham anchoring the narrative as the "real" family who provide love and stability. The film treats Indian poverty and displacement as backdrop and obstacle rather than as a systemic condition worthy of its own analysis. Dev Patel's adult Saroo becomes the proxy through which affluent Western audiences experience Indian suffering and eventual reconciliation, a dynamic that invites sympathy without requiring structural critique. The film's critical success and Oscar nominations reflect its technical competence and emotional accessibility, not any particular engagement with progressive cultural consciousness. It is a well-crafted melodrama about displacement and belonging, but one that ultimately affirms the redemptive capacity of Western adoption rather than interrogating the conditions that necessitate it.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

69%from 45 reviews
Observer100

Once in awhile, a movie comes along that is so touching and sincere, without a moment of false emotion or manipulative self-indulgence, that it establishes squatters’ rights and moves into your heart to stay.

The Hollywood Reporter90

A sober and yet profoundly stirring contemplation of family, roots, identity and home, which engrosses throughout the course of its two-hour running time.

David RooneyRead Full Review →
New York Daily News90

This amazing true story with remarkable performances by Dev Patel, Rooney Mara, Nicole Kidman and newcomer Sunny Pawar has, like the title would suggest, a blend of brute force and elegance.

Jordon HoffmanRead Full Review →
TheWrap50

It’s the kind of movie that wouldn’t exist without awards, and makes a compelling argument for phasing them out altogether.