February 13, 2010
"My Name is Khan" movie (Hindi)
"My Name is Khan" after all the controversies is surprisingly good film - with powered performances by Shahrukh Khan and Kajol. Karan Johar scores new high with a better story and crisp screenplay (Syed Field helped?). Its just a bit longer with low mass appeal. The movie may resonate more than recent movies on 9/11. Good music apart, you get to see San Francisco closer in multiplex. And its a movie which may bond with American audiences than here.
February 5, 2010
"Striker" Movie Review (Hindi)
"Striker" starring Sidharth is explosive depiction of true life story of a carroms player with all the "slumdog millionaire" twists. Director Chandan Arora makes up for lack of entertainment with mind-blowing story-telling and above-par performances from all. If an outdoor game like carroms can be drop-dead gripping and intense, story-tellers need not look westward or wayward. Music is another first - six composers and one BGM composer fire all cylinders.
February 2, 2010
"Maya Bazar" - Ever "Green" No longer Black & White!
"Maya Bazar" (is Tollywood's "Sholay" and greatest blockbuster) in cinemascope and color is an entrancing restoration done with lots of diligence and panache - the effort is audio-visually enhancing and mesmerising. Considering the number of Telugus and non-Telugus who will populate theatres to see it atleast once, this is a jackpot from a classic whose text and subtext, plots and sub-plots continue to haunt movie-goers and inspire generations of movie-makers. Watch with all.
January 29, 2010
J D Salinger - A Writer's Writer who remained reclusive till the end
- More quotations on Happiness
J. D. Salinger, Catcher In the Rye
January 27, 2010
"It's Not How Good You Are, It's How Good You Want to Be" by Paul Arden
I always liked both the covers and the layout of any book published by Phaidon. They invest well on the aesthetics of a book - binding that survives for decades, pages thick like timber (literally!), and an almost magical combination of picture-to-prose ratio. This one is a very portable, eminently speed-readable book designed for good advertising professionals and anyone with an eye for creative excellence. Paul Arden scores on every page with visually-enriched insights and punchlines that befit a Saatchi & Saatchi background. Waiting for my turn to see a Dentist, I could finish it in less than thirty seven minutes. A near miracle - these days - as suddenly the books are getting longer and movies are getting shorter! More next time...Waiting for a movie after the Pongal over-feast.
January 21, 2010
A Taste of Life - The Last Days of UG Krishnamurti by Mahesh Bhatt
Mahesh Bhatt's latest book gives vignettes of the thicker-than-blood relationship he has had with one of the world's less known Anti-Gurus - Late UG Krishnamurti (a Telugu)who led a life of anonymity, self-flagellation and was a reveller of blasphemies. Mahesh takes us through the last few months of a life led in reclusivity, gay abandon, no-no to all medical help to heal the body, yet principled iconoclasm which has its own charm. ("Your natural state has no relationship whatsoever with the religious states of bliss, beautitude and ecstasy. They lie within the field of experience."). Mahesh, I thought is a gifted writer more than a spirited film-maker, more sensitive and evocative in his writings than his movies which have trappings of a past saddled with negativity, guilt and failure. Where the book disappoints is the teasers it gives in letting us into UG's world - More Questions than Answers remain after reading the book? Why did UG shun the world? Where did he get so much funding? Who funded his non-career "career"? Why couldn't he jell with Jiddu Krishnamurthi who professes similar arguments with more fluency? Where is UG's family now? It seems as if Mahesh wants to make a career out of the questions galore on UG's estate, his legacy, and his invectives and idiosyncracies in more books.
January 16, 2010
The Double Life of Ramalinga Raju
"The Double Life of Ramalinga Raju" by Kingshuk Nag is a fine read which captures in pulsating prose the nonchalance with which Satyam's Ramalinga Raju built his empire only, how the cookie crumbled, and how Hyderabad witnessed realty boom (which must be attributed partially to Raju's lust for land - 9000 acres). The story-telling is vivid and racy with lessons galore for promoters, entrepreneurs, investors, advisors and wealth-conservers.
28.11.2009
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
"Jailor" (Telugu/Tamil) Movie Review: Electrifying!
"Jailer" is an electrifying entertainer in commercial format by Nelson who always builds a complex web of crime and police...
-
“Midhunam” (Telugu) is a much-awaited film for the art-loving Telugu crowds who love clean, good cinema. “Midhunam” means “couple” in Telug...
-
Will this be one of your friend's obituary? "R.I.P.Lipa Bajaptin. Lipa had had 3179 friends on FB (including 8 family members whic...
-
One of the many, many books written by the legendary Shakuntala Devi. I have a good collection of her books - including those gifted by my ...