Salaam Bombay! received mainly positive reviews from critics who commented on the cultural and social impact of the film. On the film
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 93% based on 30 reviews, with a
rating average of 7.8/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "
Salaam Bombay! examines life in a part of the world that many viewers have never visited - but does so with enough compassion and grace to make them feel as if they have."
Roger Ebert wrote, "The history of the making of "Salaam Bombay!" is almost as interesting as the film itself." English writer
Hilary Mantel commented, "A warm and lively film, made by Mira Nair with only a handful of professional actors." Ted Shen of
Chicago Reader wrote that, "like
Hector Babenco's
Pixote the film is unsparingly gritty, but with a woman's tenderness it also grants the characters an occasional moment of grace."
Richard Corliss of
Time magazine wrote that, "
Salaam Bombay! deserves a broad audience, not just to open American eyes to plights of hunger and homelessness abroad, but to open American minds to the vitality of a cinema without rim shots and happy endings." American film critic
Dave Kehr stated, "Much to Nair`s credit, she exploits neither the exoticism of her locale (there are no tour-guide, look-at-this flourishes) nor the misery of her subjects (suffer they may, but they do not demand pity)." American film critic
David Sterritt stated, "the movie is terrifically well-acted and beautifully filmed, however, marking an auspicious feature-film debut for Indian-American director Mira Nair."
Peter Travers commented that "poetic, powerful and disturbing,
Salaam Bombay! transcends language and cultural barriers.
Emanuel Levy, thought that the film "drew its intensity and colour from its locale, the slums of Bombay."
Vincent Canby says, "for a film about such hopelessness,
Salaam Bombay! is surprisingly cheering."
Christopher Null wrote, "with Salaam, Nair proves an early ability with a camera and at getting performances out of obviously inexperienced actors, but her writing talents are much sketchier." Rita Kempley of
The Washington Post wrote, "Nair's film has been compared to Hector Babenco's chilling "Pixote," a Brazilian look at a 10-year-old street criminal, but hers is a more compassionate, though equally troubling, portrait." On movie review site
Rediff.com critic
Sukanya Verma commented,
Salaam Bombay! "still brilliant in 25 years."
Accolades Box office Salaam Bombay! earned in the United States and Canada, from 506,100 ticket sales. In France, the film sold 633,899 tickets;. In Germany, the film sold 258,728 tickets; The film also sold 346 tickets in Switzerland and Spain since 1996, adding up to total overseas footfalls of tickets sold in the United States, France, Germany, Switzerland and Spain. Against a production budget of $450,000, the film grossed an estimated total of in overseas markets, becoming one of the
highest-grossing Indian films in overseas markets at that time. ==See also==