Hotel Mumbai film recounts horrors and courage of 2008 attacks in India
Film receives standing ovation at the Toronto film festival for its searing, vivid dramatisation of events at the opulent Taj Mahal Palace Hotel, and for its empathetic portrayal of both the victims and the perpetrators

A hard-to-watch telling of the 2008 attacks in Mumbai in Anthony Maras’s Hotel Mumbai provoked tears and cheers at its world premiere at the Toronto film festival.
It is an “anthem of resistance”, the Australian director declared at a press conference.
“You had a whole lot of people from every conceivable background, racial, ethnic, from different socioeconomic groups who came together in the face of real adversity to survive,” Maras said.
The film received a standing ovation over the weekend for its searing, vivid dramatisation of the events at the opulent Taj Mahal Palace Hotel, targeted by Lashkar-e-Taiba militants.
It was also praised by critics for its empathetic portrayal of both the victims and the perpetrators.
Armie Hammer, who plays an American guest of the hotel, said: “The script was dripping in humanity.