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Jan 11, 2018neyoscribbles rated this title 4.5 out of 5 stars
In the hustle and bustle of everyday mundane-ness, we overlook the crisis of identity as a first world problem. But it is very apparent that unanswered questions about your very existence can be a nagging void that can never be satiated. Especially in the case of Saroo, who has got pockets of memories that constantly remind him that there is a very obvious longing for time and relations lost. It is heartbreaking how Saroo is neither able to completely fit in with his adopted family nor bury the memories of his birth family and move on. I couldn’t help but feel sorrow for his birth mother who always believed her son would return back home and for his adopted mother who was able to admit and share her son’s past as her own. On another note, I loved the cast and the chemistry between each other was on point.