2008–2010: Beginnings and breakthrough |alt=Pinto with the crew of
Slumdog Millionaire In 2007, Pinto's modeling agency selected her and six other models to audition for the female lead in
Danny Boyle's film
Slumdog Millionaire (2008) after a request by its casting director. During the post-production phase, she attended an acting course at the
Barry John Acting Studio in Mumbai. and the
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, along with other cast members from the film. She was also nominated for
Best Actress in a Supporting Role at the
BAFTA Awards. Pinto's performance in the film drew little attention from critics as her screen presence in the film was limited.
The Telegraph (Calcutta) opined "it's difficult to form an opinion" on her character; its columnist Bharathi S. Pradhan noted "
Slumdog Millionaire wasn't really a test of Freida's acting abilities." In
Woody Allen's comedy-drama
You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger (2010), she acted alongside
Antonio Banderas,
Josh Brolin,
Anthony Hopkins,
Anupam Kher, and
Naomi Watts. She played a "mystery woman" who draws the attention of the character played by Brolin. Pinto then starred in
Julian Schnabel's
Miral (2010), based on a
semi-biographical novel by
Rula Jebreal, playing an orphaned Palestinian woman who grew up in a refugee camp in Israel. Before the film's production began in the Palestinian territories, Pinto prepared for the role by visiting several refugee camps in the area. She stated that she could relate to her character's experiences because of her knowledge about her relatives' experiences during the
partition of India in the 1940s. and Pinto's performance divided critics: Geoffrey Macnab of
The Independent wrote that "Miral ... is played very engagingly by Freida Pinto", while
Peter Bradshaw of
The Guardian stated that "[Pinto] looks uneasy and miscast".
2011–2018 Pinto had four releases in 2011. The first was the
science fiction film Rise of the Planet of the Apes, a
reboot of the
Planet of the Apes series. She played the role of Caroline Aranha, a
primatologist who falls in love with the main character, played by
James Franco. To prepare for her role, she researched the career of English
anthropologist Jane Goodall. Pinto's character received criticism for being too one-dimensional: Anthony Quinn of
The Independent called it a "failure", and
Todd McCarthy of
The Hollywood Reporter described the character as the most "boringly decorous tag-along girlfriend seen onscreen in years". Pinto's second screen appearance of the year was playing the title character in
Michael Winterbottom's
Trishna. The film, based on
Thomas Hardy's novel ''
Tess of the d'Urbervilles, gave Pinto the role of a teenage Rajasthani peasant, who leaves her family to work for a British-born Indian hotelier, played by Riz Ahmed. Nishat Bari of India Today'' called Pinto's role her "most substantial" one to that point.
Philip French of
The Guardian stated that Pinto "captivates" in the lead role, In contrast,
Manohla Dargis of
The New York Times wrote that Pinto is "one of [the film's] loveliest attractions, but she and her director haven't been able to give Trishna a pulse". |alt=Pinto is smiling and looking towards her left Pinto's third film role in 2011 was playing Princess Lailah in the poorly received independent film
Day of the Falcon, a period drama set in the 1930s Middle East, where she was cast alongside Antonio Banderas,
Mark Strong and
Liya Kebede. Despite overall negative reviews, Andy Webster of
The New York Times described Pinto and Kebede as "refreshing" and praised their "independent presences amid the stiflingly male-dominated milieu". Pinto's final screen appearance of the year was in the fantasy-action film
Immortals, in which she played the oracle priestess
Phaedra. Writing for
The Hollywood Reporter, Todd McCarthy remarked that Phaedra was "capably embodied" by Pinto. After 2011, Pinto had no new film releases for two years. In 2013, she appeared in the music video for
Bruno Mars' single "
Gorilla". She was criticised by the
Indian media for appearing in the video;
The Times of India and
Hindustan Times dismissed it as little more than "dirty dancing". In the same year, Pinto was also one of the narrators in the documentary film
Girl Rising, produced for the
campaign of the same name which promotes access to education for girls all over the world. Pinto's first cinematic appearance in two years was in the biographical drama
Desert Dancer (2014), which was about the life of Iranian choreographer
Afshin Ghaffarian. She played the heroin-addicted Elaheh, the love interest of the lead character played by
Reece Ritchie. The role required her to do dance training consisting of eight hours of rehearsals a day for 14 weeks. She also attended a few sessions at rehabilitation centres in the United States to prepare for her role. It received largely negative reviews, although Andy Webster of
The New York Times noted that "Pinto, even with an unfocused and underwritten role, is captivating". She played Helen, a model with whom Bale embarks on a "dalliance". She talked about acting without a script: "It is definitely a bit nerve-racking on the first day because you don't know where you are going to go. But once you figure that out, then it doesn't really matter. It is actually very relaxing. It is fun and liberating. It is an experience that I completely embrace". Her third release of that year was the Colombian action film
Blunt Force Trauma, in which she starred opposite
Ryan Kwanten and
Mickey Rourke as a woman looking for her brother's murderer. In 2015, Pinto worked on
Andy Serkis'
Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle, a
motion capture adventure fantasy film based on
Rudyard Kipling's
The Jungle Book. She portrays
Mowgli's adoptive mother, Messua, in the film.
2019–present In November 2020 Netflix released the film
Hillbilly Elegy in which Pinto played the role of
Usha Chilukuri Vance, wife of Vice President
JD Vance. In January 2021, it was announced that Pinto was to play the lead in a biopic of the
SOE agent
Noor Inayat Khan, based on the book
Spy Princess: The Life of Noor Inayat Khan by
Shrabani Basu. More recently, she and her Freebird Films company inked a first look TV deal at Entertainment One. ==Charity work==