? The film review mainly tells the story of Balam, a low-class slave in India who killed his master and used the knowledge he learned and what he learned from his master to establish a taxi company in India. The country's clan hierarchy is very obvious. Balam has been instilled in him since he was a child that he must be loyal to his master and that he is just a slave.
? White Tiger is a special case, and Balam is also a special case. Even though the place where he was born was very poor, he stood out among his peers with his wisdom. From that moment on , he is destined to become a white tiger that can only be born once in a generation.
? Balam’s owner Ashok and his girlfriend both studied in the United States and learned about higher education and equality. Ashok did not really regard Balam as a servant. Look, Balam has been refused to open the car door for him many times. Ashok’s girlfriend Pinky also treats Balam as an ordinary person, but Ashok’s heart is that the son of a rich Indian family cannot completely change his clan. Discrimination, Ashok and his family decided to let Balam, a servant, take the blame for the accident on Pinky's birthday. Although Balam did not go to jail in the end, the certificates of guilt he signed were all in Ashok's possession. In the hands of her brother, because there was someone in Ashok's family at the police station, the matter was left undisturbed. Pingji finally left because she couldn't stand the sense of nobility and superiority that Ashok and his family had in treating different clans. to Ashok's house.
? Balam said something at the end of the film review: "This world always belongs to yellow-skinned and white-skinned people, while the others are left to the gods to save them." Indeed, like Balam, There are very few people who have jumped out from the lower class. Maybe another Balam is being scolded by his master at the moment. He does not dare to resist and endures silently. Only one white tiger can be produced in one generation, and Balam is this white tiger.
(I’d like some advice for new movie reviewers)