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September 29, 2005

Ghajini - A Breaking News Review

Update - Usually an update is done at the end of a post. This is to show that I do budge for the dynamic comments that are springing-up on this post and those 3 long-time friends who wrote emails about this blog post.

One - I am not sure after seeing the movie, if I will agree/dis-agree with this 'comment-turned-review'. I could be wrong enough to put the review but wasn't it rightly named as Breaking news quick review and not a Roeper-Ebert's Analyzed review.
Two - It's pasted here as a review not because I don't like the movie. I was probably the first on the blogosphere to show love(!!) on Ghajini, when the movie was announced and my adoration towards Murugadoss' skills. Read this blogpost dated Feb 12, 2005, Surya and Murugadas join hands for Gajini. BTW, where is this breaking news dude, a lot of them are searching for him desperately. Deivamey(!!) enga poiteenga ??

Alert If you really want to read the quick review after all this hungama, click the link below. Else join the fun by reading only the comments here.

Read More..."Ghajini - A Breaking News Review" »


September 24, 2004

I, Me, Myself.

[ by Latha (lathsmail@gmail.com) ]

Hey Latha, here's to u. Way to go dear, a pat on my back. Well, no one can blame me for respecting myself now, can u? Here pals, hold my hand and I shall lead to this wonderful world of self realization. I am a best eg for puliya paarthu poonai soodu pottu kondathu. Inspired by the enormous creativity of bloggers all around, the schizo in me jumped awake and said that I can do it too after all isn't all talents hidden initially. Armed with a laptop and so called self proclaimed hidden talent, I started (or is it ended?) to pen my thoughts into words. Starting from the stuff that I don't like (isn't it comparatively easier to vent out our frustrations and dislikes). I guess all of us are just waiting for an opportunity to take it out on someone what better place to do that than in a blog. But first, tried to check the latest posts of all fellow bloggers(?!)- (hey, come on, I have started to write, so the guys who are presently writing are my fellow bloggers, surely, I can claim that). Feeling inwardly happy that Maximus is a little out of form and what aNti writes about goes only 20000 feet above my head (he isn't in my league, u see), and since is KG is busy scaring people out of their wits with his flashy antics and Anand having chosen specific subjects to write about. I thought that I will definitely have my share of readers. The huge looming threat seemed to come only from a jujubi one time Indiblog winner Lazy Geek, but me thinks I can charm him into stop writing about simple things in life and getting into some other hobbies like maybe deep sea diving or bungee jumping or something less adventurous like traveling by PTC footboard on Monday morning, when his only focus wud be on hanging on to the window rod and not drooling over Sonia Agarwal over Kodambakkam bridge. Hey, come one, give me a big hand. I did manage to write so much now, didnt I?

Now, I dedicate this piece of my writing to my earlier attempt(the first, actually hee hee hee) at writing something which I presumed would make the world sit up and look at me with respect (and a little weirdly too). This writeup is inspired by the reaction I got for my previous article. Profound silence! Isn't silence supposed to be gold and talk silver and all of u know that I cant be anyone else than a typical Indian girl who knows the true value of gold. Well, I should say that my dogged determination (read arrogance) to make my fellow bloggers and readers(?!) life miserable is also inspired by my all time fav Kamal Hassan who cant be anything but himself at any point of time. Trust me guys, Narcissm helps atleast it definitely doesnt harm.. if we cant blow our own trumpets then how will we even be able to the tell the world that we have trumpet in the first place. Well, this logic cant be beaten now, can it?

In addition to dedicating this piece to myself (hey, only I read what I write), this also goes to all those people whose talents are trying to break free to set the world right, and those who are basking in the glory of their skills. 3 cheers to all you bloggers out there for enlightening ignoramasus like me about this world's achievers and dreamers, the explored and unexplored, interesting trivia's, right up to bringing back nostalgic memories of pleasant yesteryears, lightening speed todays and positively wild tomorrows.

A special note of thanks to Lazy Geek. For identifying the writing bone in me, its ok lazy, relax everyone is allowed to make one mistake in life and you made yours :-)


September 20, 2004

The Cola War. Gossip In'corp'rated ?

[ by Latha (lathsmail@gmail.com) ]

A Brief Intro - Latha from Bangalore, a vivacious dudette living a full paced neo-urban tech life in Bangalore with full-throttled thought process, enjoys Sujatha's writings as much as she loves the protagonist Slade from Desmond Bagley's spy fiction, a veena instrumentalist, an ad fanatic and a film lover, as her hobby goes long enough, dreams of making the best out of her Indian middle class values, in the years to come.

The Cola War. Gossip In'corp'rated ?

The warring companies perspective : Are we really doing things that match our core competencies? How effective are our advertisings? Is it the content that is effective in measuring top of the mind recall that triggers a cola bottle sale or is it an object of discussion and ridicule? Are we identifying brand comparisons or celebrity identities? Are we promoting them or are they promoting us? What is the value proposition to a consumer from our product and is it what they get from the advertising campaigns?

We could have entered as a foreign brand to very culture oriented society where the buy decisions are governed by pockets and hearts that make the decision. So does our brand appeal to the heart and pocket that has an expectation of a thrilling experience and of-course for less? Do we really investigate the cause and effect of campaign and whether it was just a source of business to the media and all the new overnight celebrities who are gobbled by our purchasing power and speed to buy them before they open their thoughts? Do we remember that a soft gentle touching and cute advertisement of an Aamir with a dilemmatic choice of Miss world and Ex-Mrs. Paes still has a quantifiable recall over an Azharuddin-Jadeja eating wood? (Yes! but this time in the woods)Do we think of the consequences of buying huge budget celebrities for that day who become overnight zeros when we attached our image of a hero with them? Do we really understand culture and what makes a Frooti sail smoothly despite the shelf being stormed by the giant name bottles? Did the macho taste the thunder stay? Did the change of the thirst quenching Limca wander into nowhere?

Do we remember the days when we collected thumps up crowns with cricketing star pictures and stuck them all over the place just to earn a bat that fell of the shelf and dissolved like POP (oh yea, it was the Kapil Dev, Sunny Gavaskar, King Richards signature memento) Oh! did we forget we sold zillions of crown caps and not the thunder? Do we recall, Gold Spot - the zing thing is still in our cherished memory though it often reminds us of the Jungle book? Are we learning to protect our forever brand status or leading ourselves to an in-distinguishable status leading to brand dilution? Do we see that the forever brand status of Polaroid is just becoming foregone in the history book titled 'Death of a Company thought the brand lives forever as a name!' though can be for reasons so different but could Polaroid's marketing learn what the market wanted and what they delivered and was it timed? Well, it's a learning process. For now we cant spend our time revisiting strategy. Let us just get on with our tactical day-to-day battles and eventually war not with competition but our own strategy!

Times might change, people could get modernized and wish the internet also delivered bottles, but the Indian family culture though might seem like a movie ending, always ends with a classic touch of a tear that travels the cheek. Yes till such time India isn't the sentimental and emotional India, till such time that people think of a Diet cola and stop the calorie hunt in a calorimeter or till such time the bottles and cans reach the deepest interior of one man's land where he is sitting alone with a wireless handheld with a cola next to him (he may not even have electricity to drive the bulb mind you), we can always ignore easy, simple advertisements. We can always ignore the possibility of a tired husband coming home replace his Narasus Coffee with a bottle of fresh kiss. We can always ignore the social marketing benefits. We can ignore the possibility of furnishing the seats in local trains with our logo attached to it. We can ignore the potential of putting funds in landscaping a garden and having small billboards that say, it is from the cola company. We can always ignore the possibility of daily wage spinner who constitutes probably the entire database of a census sporting a cute small bottle of refreshing cola and say' aaaah, ye mera cola! Coca cola (COKE? Please send me my paycheck for this free advt! ;) OR! Am I the next celebrity here?)

Don't go! It is the media's turn to reflect - We are delivering the goods. Yes the company likes it, the celebrities like the fat paycheck and we are happy with the sales turnover. Yes we do wish that the celebrity we sign up vanish the next day to help us sign new comers who score two consecutive fifties but disappear into oblivion for reasons only our dear selectors can tell. We are giving what the companies want- excitement. So what if the focus group that we administered the campaign showed tremendous revenue in our regression but was randomized without matching. We deliver what they want but why should we be concerned if it doesn't trigger purchase? It wasn't our deal to deliver end customer delight? Let them battle, and we shall win!

I know it is getting a bit stretchy! But don't forget the celebrities: Hey come on! It doesn't matter if it brings a lot of professional discomfort. It doesn't matter if the ad fails and tampers my personal image? I made the money I needed for today! So what if in the process of reinstating my status of the Icon that I am, Porter's model comes into play? So what if the bargaining power of the media and company is more to sign me up for another campaign? At least I get the chance of a comeback. I need my presence no matter what. I don't mind if in the corporate battles I become a pretty monkey though the original intent was to associate me with my sentiments and love to nature's belongings.

Oh come on! It is the corporate loud speaker's turn: I proclaim my aggression, make my presence felt and word my vigor and enthusiasm to collide head on with my competition and will make bold statements. After all I am a loyal-faithful company person. I shall always remain with my cola. It doesn't matter if I blow up my chances of seeking an elevated position in my competing cola company. I don't mind the vibes? And I know the cola companies would always give me a chance to exchange my seats and become their loudspeaker to talk about and against what I said from here! Celebrities are perishable, not me……

The consumer - You and me! - Ada Innaba Cola Shola. Namba Nair Tea, Masal Vadai Maadiri Varumaa.


September 11, 2004

"Chaiya Chaiya" on the Noo Yaak A Train - A review of Bombay Dreams

[ by Ashok Rajamani (donkeytiger@gmail.com) ]

A Brief Intro - Ashok grew up commuting by the 12B pallavan. A materials engineer by trade, he is now a rootless wanderer in the States. He believes regional languages have the best in Indian Writing, and that Indian cinema could still stop being so intoxicatingly static. Someday he plans to settle in a South Indian Temple town, and revive the Swatantra party. Though for the near future, he shall remain a ravenous capitalist.

"Chaiya Chaiya" on the Noo Yaak A Train

"Shakalaka baby, Shakalaka baby, don't Shakalaka with me." So goes the lines of a song set to AR Rehman's music in the Broadway extravaganza Bombay Dreams. The lyrics, if you are care, are by one Don Black. This is not going to be a relentless negative critique of Bombay Dreams. Bombay Dreams is a mixed bag and even after the hindsight of one whole week, a general "yes or no" fatwa cannot be issued.

A musical is basically a story with minimal script and lots of music. A critical difference from Bollywood movies is that the singing tends to move the story along. The Oscar winning movie "Chicago" is based on a musical of the same name. Musicals are released in theatres in Broadway-New York, while there is a parallel musical scene in London too. Not more than 2-3 big budget musicals are released every season. Though some of the longest running musicals like "Phantom of the Opera" and "Cats" have been running for something like 10+ seasons, most don't survive the first season.

Bombay Dreams came to the US after two moderately successful seasons in London. It is based on Rahman's music. Andrew Lloyd Webber and Shekhar Kapur are supposed to have made some vague contributions. Meera Syal (of "Goodness Gracious Me" fame) is credited with the story though she probably wrote it on the back page of a plane ticket on one lazy afternoon. Therein lays the problem with Bombay Dreams. Bombay Dreams is constructed as a parody of a typical Bollywood masala movie but what if the original product itself is perceived (by the regular American) as a parody?

Read More...""Chaiya Chaiya" on the Noo Yaak A Train - A review of Bombay Dreams" »


August 28, 2004

How do you say "AR Rahman rocks!" in Chinese?

Guest Blog #33 - Anand C

wohae.jpg

As if being nothing short of a god for a billion people wasn't enough, AR Rahman's Warriors of Heaven and Earth is a solid introduction of ARR to the Chinese people (and mainstream western movie audiences)!

The excellent lyrics of Mehboob (who has many a time been in the shadows of Vairamuthu while composing Rahman's lyrics in Hindi) and BlaaZe for hindi and english versions of Warriors of Peace can't be missed. The soulful rendering and theme (in Hindi by Sadhana Sargam and English by Sunitha Sarathy) reminds one of "Tu Jahan Jahan Chalega...mera saaya saath hoga..." of yesteryears by Lata Mangeshkar.

The mysticism around the pieces makes one wonder when a Quentin Tarantino will pick up Rahman's soulful and east-inspired pieces as background for a Kill Bill like martial arts scene...

Sivamani is back with two excellent solo percussion pieces, including one war-march. He is a percussion lover's delight!

I can't wait for an occasion to see him perform the pieces live!


August 24, 2004

Being #2, Avis Cars and Tamil film music...

Guest Blog #32 - Anand C

The piece, "What should you do if you are #2?" which I got to from Marketing Playbook, got me thinking...

As Laura Ries says in this post, Avis is one of the most memorable #2 campaigns (some other examples are also listed), focussing on why they are different from Hertz. This ad, created by Bill Bernbach is indicative of the theme of the campaign that converts disadvantages to advantages:

two_avis.gif

Of course, positioning runs deep in Laura's blood. Her father, Al Ries (literally) wrote the book on "Positioning", in addition to several follow up (and not as interesting) books.

Her post has a lot of lessons for the harris jeyarajes, the bharardwajes, vidyasagars and Raja family's second generation (and the other umpteen upcoming tune-makers). Instead of trying to be AR Rahman clones (the undisputable #1) that seems to be the way to go, it makes a lot of sense to differentiate from the #1 as much as possible - like focus more on melody and less on percussion, put out pieces inspired by village and folk music, more lyrics-inspired music, more situational tunes, etc.

In a way, this is a painfully long restatement of Guru's simple plea earlier... there is no strong #2, and there seems to be scope for an Avis.


August 20, 2004

Looking back...looking forward...

Guest Blog #31 - Anand C

I've been getting into several conversations about why I blog... in an attempt to try and answer that question, here's a compilation of the things I've been intrigued by, as represented by past blogs:

Co-Blogs with LazyGeek: (World Themes for Indian Cinema)

1. The Man Who Saw Infinity - on Math Genius Srinivasa Ramanujan
2. ‘EYE’ THINK, THEREFORE 'EYE' AM - on Dr.V (Arvind Eye Hospital)
3. The Man in the Mirror - first attempt at verse.
4. Art for Art's Sake - on dance and the arts.
5. LAUGHTER, THE BEST MEDICNE (Nightly Dose) - on NBC's Jay Leno
6. Coming Soon...
7. ???
8. ???

The Lonewolf blogs:

1. Vairamuthu's magAKK! - what kicked it all off!
2. Satrangi...Only You... now Fanah! - on ARR's magic!
3. Social Influence in Media - Art or Science? - Influence is one of my favorite non-fiction books.
4. Funda on Fanah - Ripples thought this was interesting!
5. Footprints... - Bengali poetry in Hey,Ram translated into English.
6. Thillana's Mann Vaasam - blogging about a concert.
7. Happy Birthday, Mr.Feynman! - learned he is Kingsley's idol.
8. Reflections on Mani Ratnam's Aayitha Ezhuthu
9. What makes NEWS? - rant!
10. Mani Ratnam and the "relative grading" syndrome!
11. On Coincidence... - 5 movies that impress upon the theme.
12. Week in Review - Once upon a time... - remembering a old teacher.
13. Mr. India, redux?
14. Goodbye, blue skies? - on space travel
15. The road to Nirvana... - wondering why Kurt Cobain died young!
16. Aayitha Ezhuthu titles - an easter egg? - thanks, Pradeep!
17. Fahrenheit 9/11, Control Room and the rise of a new genre? - Mitochondria didn't think so!
18. An ode to 90 school children... - Kumbakonam fire tragedy.
19. Joy of getting something unexpected... - On hearing Matt Damon, watching Catch-22.
20. Glass-bangles Vinayaka (OR) Beauty is skin deep? - on R Parthiban
21. A tale of two Flip-flops
22. HmmM... Night?
23. David VS Goliath and the spirit of August 15th - on independent shops VS 800 pound corporations.
24. You may say I'm a dreamer! - titled after John Lennon's lyrics from 'Imagine'.

Looking at the topics above, I think I blog for the experiences it brings... for the interesting new people it introduces me to...for the freedom to think about the things I like.

Thoughts?


You may say I'm a dreamer!

Guest Blog #30 - Anand C

Just-a-Dream.jpg

We've all heard the "graduation speech" bit in most schools about the need for the young to dream. But it's interesting to see Ms. Marilee Jones, the Dean of Admissions at MIT, integrate "day-dreaming" more of a criteria in the application process. More importantly, kudos to her for coming out and telling the public about it.

This response from her captures the essence of the problem with conventional admission systems:

Baby boomers have such high expectations for themselves and for their kids. The parents think kids have to have music lessons. They're expected to play two or three sports. They're expected to belong to certain clubs. They're expected to do community service. Each one of those activities is headed up by an adult, who expects a lot from those kids.

We have a whole generation of kids who are being trained to be workaholics. They have no free time. They are being trained to please adults. And what started as a natural reaction to not wanting to have your kid home while you're working has been reinforced by the college admission process that expects kids to have lots of activities.

About three years ago, I asked a group of students: "What do you daydream about?" And one kid said to me: "We don't daydream. There's no reward for it, so we don't do it." Boy, that hit me right between the eyes.

We tend to make our lives appear planned, smooth and thought-through on any college application, because "sat next to the window and dreamed about doing good for my hometown" or "read every spy novel in my library for no good reason" does not get any points or consideration in an admission process - until now. By giving kids the ability to be flexible and by giving the admissions process the flexibility to take in these flexible kids, MIT is sending out the impression that it's OK to not be perfect and still succeed.

This new system (50 out of 1,665 would not have made the cut otherwise), is definitely a first step in the right direction.

Maybe we will discover the Ramanujans when they are young if our school systems thought about a similiar system of admission...


August 14, 2004

David VS Goliath and the spirit of August 15th

Guest Blog #29 - Anand C

I love the underdog. Among the few Biblical stories I know, one of my favorites is David VS Goliath... it never ceases to inspire.

As if reminding me of a religion I know nothing about, two little independent shops in the Northern California area keep emphasizing on the concept of the little guy - the underdog. Sheer inspiration in just their audacity in taking on the 600 pound gorillas of their industries... drumroll please...

Megabooks in University Avenue - located right next to a more than 50,000 ft. Borders bookstore and still surviving. Very aptly named, and rumor has it that one of the owners is called David.

megabooks.jpg

Red Rock Cafe - located two blocks from a Starbucks and catering to those who still care about the spirit of an independence of the shop as much as they care about the aroma of their coffee.

tn-redrock_mv.jpg

In their own little way, these two little icons are thematic of this blog, and fitting reminders of the spirit of August 15, no?


HmmM... Night?

Guest Blog #28 - Anand C

MNight.jpg

The title of this article caught me by surprise. The case that Michael Agger makes is cogent, even if he had to rely at times on exaggeration of the facts and ignore some rough edges to make his case (for instance, the fact that Praying with Anger, M Night's first film grossed $7,000 has *nothing* to do with anything). I would put this article somewhere in the middle of a spectrum, where one extreme is mindless icon-bashing and the other is a journalistic sincerity to preserve the essence of story-telling in film.

In spite of all its shortcomings, this piece does make one ask - "Is good story-telling defined by the sincerity of what the creator wants to say, or has it been reduced to saying what the audience wants to hear?"


August 10, 2004

Button's Mechanics and Schumi rants

Guest Blog - Prabhu Krishnamurthy

The year 2004 has seen Michael Schumacher notch up 11 victories out of 12 races. It is thrilling and wonderful for a schumi fan, but at same time it shows how Ferrari as a team work. In the words of STAR-Sports commentator Dont get bored by this season. You are watching a phenomenon, which you can cherish some years later. That sums it all. I will write separately on Schumi sometime later.

Behind Schumi its all happening. First came the news of Ralf joining Toyota, then Webber joining Williams, Fisichella joining Renault and now the startiling move of Jenson Button to BMW. No clue about what DC and Trulli are upto.

Next years possible line ups -

MS & Rubens- Ferrari
Webber & Button(hopefully no legal action)- BMW Williams
Kimi & Montoya - McLaren
Ralf & Trulli (thats what the rumor mill says)-Toyota
Sato (Thanks to Honda) & DC or Anothony Davidson or even Mika Hakkinen - BAR Honda.
Alonso & Fisichella - Renault.

If Williams and Mclaren up their pace, then next season will be one of the best ones in F1. And new regulations will be in place as well. Though I disagree on that. What F1 needs is more tracks where overtaking is possible.

If you leave Michael apart, the other places are very closely raced. Rubens, Button, Alonso, Trulli have been competing with each other and it is a thrill to watch. FIA should accept that the other drivers are not in the league of Michael before changing the rules. If Michael had retired at the end of 2002, the season we are watching right now would have been the best. Initially only McLaren and Williams were competing with Ferrari. Now it is a pleasant sight to watch Renault and BAR-Honda upping their pace. And by changing the rules, they are playing into the hands of Ferrari and Michael. Now they are saying 1 engine for 2 races. No prizes for guessing which team has the most reliable engine :-)

Last, I always thought Button as the gentleman of Formula 1. He shows his aggression and competiveness only on racing track. The way he moved to BMW ditching BAR would definitely alienate many fans from him. 2 years back when Renault dumped Button it was Dave Richards and BAR-Honda who lend him a helping hand. If Button is what he is today, it is mainly because of Dave Richards and BAR-Honda. Things could have been done in a better way.

I fail to understand how Button's mechanics and Button himself would be motivated for the rest of the season!!!


August 6, 2004

A tale of two Flip-flops

Guest Blog #27 - Anand C

flipflop.jpg
OK, we've all heard this one. John Kerry is a flip-flopper...

Hardly!

Here's the "glass is half-full" view - This is not the first war he has flip-flopped on. He fought the Vietnam war and then fought against it (by testifying in front of the Senate). As independents say, he passed with flying colors the two biggest character tests for any American in his generation!

The "glass is half-empty" view - Whatever the war is, he has reserved the right to change his opinion based on the facts. He's consistent about that. That's better than what has now become a joke on late night TV - unchanged stands on WMDs, "Mission Accomplished", and the connection between Sept 11 and Saddam.

Either way, the Republicans are left with a "There is no gold in the wall!" argument (a la the old joke), one that could be toppled in terms of "Aha!" value only by their ability to convince Americans with it!


August 4, 2004

Glass-bangles Vinayaka (OR) Beauty is skin deep?

Guest Blog #26 - Anand C

Two films that make the cut as ones I recommend to friends who want to watch "good" tamil movies (apart from the usual suspects) are Pudhiya Padhai and HouseFull. To me, both are fresh even today. However, not many people appreciate the recommendations. Their main peeve: could not tolerate the hero's (R Parthiban) face!

Parthiban is definitely not the only actor to receive this treatment... this piece from a recent interview with him (mainly discussing Kudaikkul Mazhai) caught my eye:

I was once invited to the first birthday party of my friend's baby. I had only a 50-paise coin with me. How does one buy a gift with 50-paise?

An idea dawned on me. I bought four glass bangles and broke them into pieces. With the carved broken pieces, I created a Vinayaka. Then, I wrapped the gift beautifully and presented it in style. When I visited them next, I saw my Vinayaka prominently displayed in the front room.

My eyes turned moist with joy. When you put your heart and soul into any creation, it will surely bring joy to all. I apply the same logic in my movies too.

The sincerity of his conviction to be different definitely hit home...

Acceptance of Nana Patekar and the recent recognition of Om Puri (with an OBE) notwithstanding, one wonders if we still live in a world where beauty is skin deep, and those who aren't fortunate enough to be fair-skinned get step-child treatment...


July 26, 2004

Joy of getting something unexpected...

It's awesome to get little surprises when you least expect them...listening to an NPR interview with Matt Damon, and watching Catch-22 with the Director's commentary qualify as two of that kind.

A large part of Matt Damon's interview focussed on the little things behind the Good Will Hunting screenplay (and how he got one of his few 'A's at Harvard writing a play which led to GWH...). Piece of trivia - the one scene which stayed in the film (when it was adapted from the play) was the one in which Hunting describes the impressionist, color-by-numbers painting in his psychologist's office.

Catch-22's director commentary features Steven Soderbergh. What's funny is that he has nothing to do with the film, but makes up for the technical stupidity of the director, Mike Nichols. Classic moment - Mike forgets the technical name for the introductory shot in the film, one worth watching... (and Steven Sob reminds him - a "time-lapse" shot).

Steven's days are being counted too - Ocean's 11, 12...13 (now that Bruce Willis has signed up)... and still counting!


July 20, 2004

An ode to 90 school children...

Guest Blog #24 - Anand C

bud
[reproduced with permission]

Could not find anything that expressed the mix of emotions on the Kumbakonam incident better than Caught in the Bud on Balaji's photo-blog ...


July 16, 2004

Fahrenheit 9/11, Control Room and the rise of a new genre?

Guest Blog #23 - Anand C

911
[No Spoilers Ahead]

Fahrenheit 9/11 and Control Room (made by Jehane Noujaim) were both released within a month of one another. One starts from several parts of the world (Michigan, Texas, Iraq) and concentrates arguments from these multiple sources to mount a coherent forced attack on the Bush administration. The other starts from a dusty broadcast room (of the Qatar based Arab news agency Al-Jazeera) and paints its view of the outside world through that media lens. One spews hatred and has no pretense of an "independent" film, the other is a sincere portrayal of a very controversial topic, and deserves praise for sticking to its "independent" stand even though there is ample temptation to succumb and ride the controversy wave!

Both leave their mark, but not as staid, sober documentaries.

In an already polarized country, F 9/11 provoked like none other (maybe JFK brought forth this kind of intense reaction...). Democratic groups like MoveOn.org are organizing Fahrenheit parties to get people to carry their anger all the way to the ballot boxes! In fact, it's probably fair to say Michael Moore is an activist who uses film as his propaganda tool, than a director who portrayed a sensitive (and controversial) issue (judging from his themes in Roger and Me, and Bowling for Columbine).

When Quentin Tarantino handed Michael Moore the first ever Cannes Pale d'Or for a 'documentary', he made it evident that the accolade was for the film, not its political statements. Did he see the coming of a new genre before the public did?

Wonder if we are seeing the arrival of the "opinion-entary"?

PS: Stupid comment of the month: Ray Bradbury's (awesome writer and author of Fahrenheit 451), whining that Michael Moore did not ask him for permission to use the title!


July 12, 2004

Aayitha Ezhuthu titles - an easter egg?

Guest Blog #22- Anand C

I've heard of programmers dropping little "easter eggs" in their code that only they know of... things like a funny face appearing if the 29th of February falls on a Friday... or a Pixar character's eyes modeled after an ex-girl friend...

But Pradeep told me today (when we were catching up after a long time) about this easter egg in Aayitha Ezhuthu's titles - apparently the way the titles appear and blur out are the same as the the way the vehicles drive past the protagonists in the famous Napier bridge scene, but with a mask over the top-view camera.

Anyone noticed it? I for one missed it the first time...


July 10, 2004

The road to Nirvana...

Guest Blog #21 - Anand C

It is frustrating when people you like do things you aren't proud of. Case in point: the suicide note of Kurt Cobain, the lead singer of rock-legend Nirvana and singer/songwriter of Never Mind, one of the most influential rock albums ever produced. The last line of the rather depressing note is reproduced here:

"I'm too much of an erratic, moody baby! I don't have the passion anymore, and so remember, it's better to burn out than to fade away."

Why did this come to mind all of a sudden? Because this response in a recent interview by Kamal Hasan is something I would have hoped Kurt realized, that would have provided more A-class music to thousands of fans (like me!) for a long time to come (He was 27 when he died!)

How do you analyse your performance objectively?
Very easy. If you keep criticising yourself, the zenith of it is suicide. You hate yourself so much that you are ready to kill it. Yes, I said 'it' and not him or me. So criticism is easy. Some people suffer from it because they don't know when to stop criticising. It is like eating sweets. You must know when to stop.

Call it a selfish fan speaking... RIP, Kurt!


July 1, 2004

Goodbye, blue skies?

Guest Blog #20 - Anand C

mojave

It is no doubt a historic moment when the first successful private space flight was launched in Mojave. The achievement ranks up there in grit with Chuck Yeager and the breaking of the sound barrier. It is legalizing every pipe dream ranging from relocation to tourist resorts, that have been the stuff of science fiction.

And yet, it seems like Pink Floyd's words from long back (Goodbye, Blue Sky) are resonating now more than ever:

Did you ever wonder why we had to run for shelter,
When the promise of a brave new world,
Unfurled beneath a clear blue sky?
Goodbye, blue sky.
Goodbye.


June 26, 2004

Mr. India, redux?

Guest Blog #18 - Anand C

invisibility cloak

Researchers at the University of Tokyo have come up with an invisibility cloak. The idea seems simple in its basic form - project the background image onto the masked object, thereby making it seem invisible. The (intended) applications include surgeons whose own hands hamper vision during surgery, or pilots who would like the plane floors to be transparent during landings!

The masked object is 'invisible' from one side only (for obvious reasons). It's true that the person is only half-invisible, but how you feel about it depends on whether you are a "glass is half-full" or "glass is half empty" person!

We know Rajnikanth's movies are popular in Japan, but who knew someone took Shekhar Kapur's Mr. India (with due apologies to H.G Wells) seriously?


June 19, 2004

Week in Review - Once upon a time...

Guest Blog #17 - Anand C

One of my favorite professors had an interesting ability to combine many things in one story / train of thought - often starting from something fairly random. Left one with the feeling that everything was connected. For instance his compilation of some of the week's interesting news items might sound like this (Click on the links to go into the news items):

This post, passed on birthday wishes...
to late Prof. Richard Feynman,
who worked at Los Alamos,
on what became the A-bomb...
Built on physics principles of Einstein...
who in his writings mentioned Gandhi,
as the greatest that walked the face of the earth.
And urged people to 'Think Different', and was used,
in a campaign by a company named after a fruit
Called Apple, whose boss has a side project,
Pixar, which recently stopped negotiating with Disney...
that stopped distribution of a controversial film
on recent events and George W Bush.
Who was in Normandy to speak,
at the 60th anniversary of D-Day (June 6)
where 9,500 soldiers sacrificed their lives.
And need to be remembered!


June 18, 2004

On Coincidence...

Guest Blog #16 - Anand C

"can the loud clap of a cymbal change everything?"
- 'The man who knew too much' (1956)

"a large van coming across the street, onto a slab of glass, Lola and her boyfriend fleeing from the police..."
- Run Lola Run (1999)

"...discovering a little box of playthings that some child hid away decades ago... everything associated with childhood will one fit one day fit in a little box... is the way to true happiness improving the lives of everyone around you?"
- Amelie (2001)

"what if there are no conicidences?"
- Signs (2002)

"three youth. from three different strata. meet on the Napier bridge. their lives change irrevocably..."
- Aayitha Ezhuthu (2004)


June 14, 2004

World Themes for Indian Cinema (Part 4 of 8)

Co-Blogging Series - Anand C and Lazy Geek

'ART FOR ART"S SAKE'

classical dance montage

"If I worship thee for fear of hell, burn me in hell; if I worship thee in hope of Paradise, exclude me from Paradise. But if I worship thee for thy own sake, grudge me not thy everlasting beauty!"

This hymm from Sufi saint Rabi'a sums up an artist's approach to the arts ('ars gratia artis' or 'art for arts' sake'), the essence of Theme 4 of this series [story so far]. True artists are said to draw inspiration from their own experiences. A.R Rahman's "Thee Thee" from Thiruda Thiruda comes to mind as an example where the interweaving of the loud & pacy male voice and the soft & melodious female voice seems to subtly reflect the criss-crossing influences of Hinduism and Islam in his own life.

Classical Music and Dance are un-ending sources of inspiration. The mystical and symbolic nature and its ability to express subtle, multi-layered human emotions succintly is an excellent theme to explore. Traditionally, some memorable characters have been portrayed on celluloid. Sankarabaranam, Salangai Oli, Sindhu Bhairavi, Taal. And yet, some eminently forgettable characters (who can't shake a leg to save their lives!) have come and gone, bringing down the genre with them (Ramarajan's world record for the most make-up per sq. cm of skin notwithstanding). It's time for a revival!

Read More..."World Themes for Indian Cinema (Part 4 of 8)" »


June 11, 2004

Mani Ratnam and the "relative grading" syndrome!

Guest Blog 14 - Anand C

Good students are good students in the Indian education system, regardless of how well others perform. You get "first class" if you have 60%. Simple!

However in the American educational system you could get a 'B' if you got 60% and half the class scored higher than you. On the flip side, you could get less than 40% and still get a 'B' if most of the class is behind you. The key to decide which side of the 'bump in the bell curve' one sits on is which class you get compared to!

If Mani Ratnam's Aayitha Ezhuthu is analyzed a la the Indian education system (i.e., by itself, not in comparison with his past films), he would get a great grade - commercially and critically speaking. Most current reviews though seem biased in one form or another by the "relative grading" syndrome.

What do you think?


June 9, 2004

What makes NEWS?

Guest Blog 13 - Anand C

I've wondered how news is prioritized and given preference and how they choose what is repeated again and again on 24-hour news channels. (Case in point: The same weekend that Britney Spears went through her "one-day" wedding in Las Vegas, NASA's Rover landed had its historic Mars landing. It's anybody's guess as to which of the two got all the ink).

One of my friends (a professional in the print industry) seems to know why. According to him, the pocket guide to determine what is news consists of two high-level guidelines:

1. Someone died.
2. Someone got rich.

Evidently, degrees of separation from these two guidelines determines how much "human interest" a story has. Sounds morbid but true...

UPDATE: The NEWS being advertised as a 'show' is more scary. What happens when bad news is being delivered about a company that is sponsoring that segment? Also, news anchors create brands around themselves for being trustworthy. Now, who does the audience trust and more importantly, hold accountable - the TV network or the announcer? -a.


June 3, 2004

World Themes for Indian Cinema (Part 3 of 8)

Co-Blogging Series- Anand Chandrasekharan and Lazy Geek

Fire-fighters, investment bankers, engineers working on outsourced IT projects, doormen - thousands lost their lives. The untold outrage, the genuine sorrow (and the political photo-ops) aside, one of the most vivid memories of September 11, 2001 is tens of people jumping down from a burning tower.

man falling from tower

When people are struck by tragedy... when they are jumping out of a burning tower... are they jumping from jobs and lives they loved?

Parts 1 and 2 of this series focussed on real people (Srinivas Ramanujan and the unsung hero Dr.V) whose lives make inspiring themes. This attempt (in verse) is more abstract and philosophical and tries to relate to the mindset of the victim when tragedy strikes and one's life flashes before one's eyes...

THE MAN IN THE MIRROR
Our parts, our roles, they're all perfect,
So prim nobody would suspect...
anything astray, anything out of the ordinary,
Performances simply extraordinary.
As we live life, donning our make up,
Through every "Howz it going", thru every "whatsup",
Do we stop to think, to ponder?
To look for a moment, yonder...
At the man in the mirror, he lives...
Reflections, ruminations, dreams, beliefs!
Listen to him, for he would introduce,
That person, given a choice, we'd choose...
Be him, and life would not be sour,
Even if one's jumping from a burning tower.

My Take on this - Lazy Geek
He stands high at the 102nd floor of the burning tower, struggling what could be his escape route. He can probably jump and hope he can survive. Flashes of his wife, children, parents, friends come before him. Should he jump? I am worried about him.

They may call it sensational stuff, paint it grey or even complain it as cashing in from a nostalgic tale, but the man from the falling tower is certainly the concern of the theme.

Movies like Mahanadhi have captured the toil a man undergoes for no mistake of his. The way families get destroyed because of one small mis-judgement. It irritates you. You can never stomach that. You can't even agree to this fact. It is one of the few times that we have reality striking before our eyes.

Didn't the reality strike on 9/11? Didn't that reality strike us with the incidents that happened in India? Every time it happens we forget it in less than a week as the news about those incidents decreases exponentially. But thinking back after a couple of years, they get reduced to few images we saw on CNN that night, in India.

Movies have long standing impact on people life. Genuine Ones. This could also be one genuine one if at all someone was willing to be genuine enough in crafting this movie. It needn't be as lavish as Titanic, as sober as Schindler's List. Just a honest depiction. Indian directors are changing to the new style of Multiplex movies. This, however, cannot be a multiplex movie. By all means, this has to widely watched like Lagaan.

But that man at the 102nd floor, waiting to jump, still worries me.


June 1, 2004

World Themes for Indian Cinema (Part 2 of 8)

‘EYE’ THINK, THEREFORE 'EYE' AM
Co-Blogging Series- Anand Chandrasekharan and Lazy Geek

Dr. Alan Grant: There are two kinds of boys – the ones who want to be astronomers and the ones who want to be astronauts. The astronomer, the paleontologist, gets to study these amazing things from a place of complete safety.
Young Eric: But you never go into space.
Dr. Alan Grant: It’s the difference between imagining and seeing.

Notwithstanding this thought-provoking conversation from Jurassic Park III, probably the only situation where seeing is more valuable than imagining is when you are blind.

The first post in this series focussed on biopics and the life of Ramanujam. This one carries that thread further, focussing on a life that has vision – literally! Affectionately called Dr.V on more than one occasion, it’s the story of Dr.G Venkataswamy.

Dr.G Venkataswamy

Read More..."World Themes for Indian Cinema (Part 2 of 8)" »


May 28, 2004

World Themes for Indian Cinema (Part 1 of 8)

Co-Blogging Series- Anand Chandrasekharan and Lazy Geek

The best part of a blog is this: what can be is only a few paragraphs away from what is! The roots for this blog-series were formed during a conversation with Lazy Geek about how world themes will become an increasing part of and be a greater source for inspiration to Indian (and Tamil) cinema. What follows then, is a series of world themes that hopefully inspire Indian cinema.

The Man Who Saw Infinity

ramanujam - the man who saw infinity
Srinivas Ramanujan (1887–1920)

Some of the most memorable movies have been the story of an inspiring man or woman (Malcolm X, A Beautiful Mind, Schindler’s List). There has been some honest cinema made in India recently around the lives of the Poet Bharathi (where I loved Sayaji Shindey play Subramania Bharathi), Kamaraj and Bhagat Singh. Biopics are also my personal favourites: hence the first theme resonates around a life that has been fascinating, inspiring and mystic, all in the same vein – Srinivas Ramanujan.

Read More..."World Themes for Indian Cinema (Part 1 of 8)" »


May 24, 2004

Reflections on Mani Ratnam's Aayitha Ezhuthu

Guest Blog 9 - Anand Chandrasekharan

This is not a film review. You can catch one (some of them reviewing the filmmaker, than the film) here on LazyGeek, here and here. A prolific filmmaker like Mani Ratnam makes one think, by addressing contemporary issues from a human perspective, albeit to finally deliver a commercial film. And Aayitha Ezhuthu did make one think.

Before we move on to other ruminations, the point is worth making that the movie is unlikely to succeed in Hindi (as Yuva) for the same reasons that Nayak (a remake of Shankar's blockbuster Tamil movie Mudhalvan) failed to impress. It's surprising that Mani Ratnam, who has made a career of putting his finger on the urban pulse, did not see through this. A theme like Ram Gopal Varma's Company (based primarily on a Bombay gang) may have local relevance and interpretations, but a screeneplay like Yuva (based primarily on student leaders and their effect on local politics) is unlikely to have much emotional association among North Indian audiences. The Tamil version is definitely a recipe for a blockbuster, and is unlikely to go the direction of Kannathil Muthamittal or Uyire (which received more critical than box-office acclaim).

The timing is impeccable: it comes at a time when the Indian public, primarily the 700 million living in 700,000 villages have spoken in a collective voice through their electoral franchise that India Shining is a farce, when their daily struggles for "Roti, Kapda, Makaan" and "Paani, Sadak, Bijli" are unceasing. The film's emphasis that as long as the top 1% of India does not extend its hand to the remaining 99%, no one else will, is well-made. My friend and netCore CEO Rajesh Jain's As India Develops posts came to mind.

The movie's theme, Identity, is beautifully expounded upon. People who complain that Mani 'Sir' had little to say, need only look at the subtleties in the film. When Michael Vasant spares Inba Sekar towards the end, disparaging not him but his dirty politics, the themed lyrics rang clear:

Aayutham Yedu, Aanavam Sudu...
Thee Pandam Yedu, Theemaiyai Sudu
Irulai Yeritthu Vidu.

(Kill ego with your weapons...Kill evil with your fire...and use it to extinguish darkness...)

A lot has been said about the film being inspired by the Mexican film Ameros Perros ('Love's a Bitch'), Kurasowa's Rashomon, and even Pulp Fiction. To say that a three-way flashback used in a narration belongs to Quentin Tarantino is to say that Al Gore invented the Internet. Yes, there were techniques of story-telling that were unoriginal. But Aayitha Ezhuthu is definitely a good tasting wine, regardless of the fact that it's packaged in an old bottle.

What does the coincidence, that forms the crux of AKK, have to do our daily lives? We may not remember the day, but certainly the moment when an incident changed the way we think. It may have been an article, a person, even a thought. But it changes everything. That fallibility of human thinking is brought to life well. Of course, one could not have trusted Mani Ratnam any less. It's not a new theme in film (Amelie, Signs, and Run Lola Run all expound on this theme...more on these in a separate blog...) but has been handled well here, and leads to an excellent ending which respects the audience and does not hand them an over-simplified resolution to a complex and subtle issue (a la "Main Hoon Na").

As for the events in the film, it definitely kept the audience engrossed. The black and white morality between Madhavan and Surya's characters reminded one that for every 'Gentleman', there is a 'Kicha's Appalam' to deal with. Madhavan's Vote for Inba Shekar scene and Surya proving of mathematic formulae in jail and his tiffs with Bharathiraja are going to remain in memory for a long time, be filed away under ‘M’ for Mani Ratnam, and be compared with montages that evoke nostalgic memories even today from Dalapathi and Nayagan. It's hard to deny that the new breed of stars have arrived in South Indian cinema. It also brought back to memory a cable interview that Tina Brown had with Irshad Manji, the author of "The Trouble with Islam", where she brings out the concept of "Inshtihaad", which is another way of fighting against an enemy in Islam, but through peace. She hoped that it would replace "Jihad" as the Islamist way of expressing their anger, and it was amazing to see both her faith in Islam as well as her optimism about the Middle East. Such optimism, the essense of Michael Vasant's character, is contagious.

The two things that stood out were how well the cast and crew brought out the theme of AKK (the last letter in the Tamil language) and the media hype that preceded the movie's release. Everything I wondered after seeing Ameros Perros came back after AKK, and was summarized by Vairamuthu's lyrics in "Hey, Goodbye Nanba":

Andha Saalai Yil Nee Vandhu Seramal...
6 degree yil yen paarvai saayamal
Vilagi Poyirundhaal thollaiye Illai.... Idhu Vendadha Velai.

(If only you hadn't been at that street; If only my eyes hadn't tilted 6 degrees; There would have been no trouble...)

Mani Ratnam would probably be wishing he was a little known director whose work gets discovered each time. The only factor that seems to be selling this movie short is his larger than life image. Expectationos, Perros!


May 12, 2004

Happy Birthday, Mr.Feynman!

Guest Blog 8 - Anand Chandrasekharan

Richard Feynman (1911 - forever)
Member of the Los Alamos Project.
Inventor - Quantum Electrodynamics.
Physicist.
Professor at Caltech.
Nobel Laureate.
Bongo drummer.
Safe-cracker.
Painter of still life.
Reader of heiroglyphics.
Poet.

Here's my favorite Richard Feynman quartet:

I wonder why, I wonder why,
I wonder why I wonder...
I wonder why I wonder why,
I wonder why I wonder.

Happy birthday, Mr Feynman! Your lectures in Physics continue to inspire as much your poetry will...


May 9, 2004

Thillana's Mann Vaasam

Guest Blog 7 - Anand Chandrasekharan

Oorai Vittu Veruooru Vandhaalum, unakku ullirukkum Mann Vasam
Naarai Vittu Poo Uthirndhaalum, Nalla Manama Veesum Mann Vasam
Yaarai Marandhaalum, Yenna Muyandralum, Marakka Mudiyadhu Mann Vasam
Paaraikku Naduvula Padinju Kiddakura Eeram Dhaan da Mann Vasam.

What happens when a bunch of talented people get together, and move well beyond personalities and egos to gracefully share the stage and put up a spirited show that compromises neither on quality nor on originality? The audience has a ball of a time. It's about a week since THILLANA, the popular Bay area music band, did their annual bash (proceeds of which will be used for Vibha's projects in India), and also took the opportunity to bid farewell to Alex Babu, one of the guys who brought the band together (and is now moving back to India). Some thoughts:
- The play, which was a spoof on Kamal Hasan's Virumandi was distracting at times, but never boring and held the show together, besides making it more than just another musical event. Good job on integrating it with the music! (the villagers singing Kaadu Potta