February 26, 2010

Book Review: Tales From the Bench and the Bar by Vicaji J.Taraporevala



There are over 47,000 pending cases in Supreme Court, over 3.7 million in High Court and around 26.3 million in subordinate judiciary. Amidst all this insurmountable volume of work, black dress, uniform, countless PILs (Public Interest Litigation)  being filed every day, and cases for bringing lawyers' assets to book under Right To Information Act, one wonders whether a lawyer's life is all about serious stuff! Not so, according to the book - Tales from the Bench and the Bar by Vicaji J Taraporevala. Its a delightful insider's account of life on the Bench and the Bar giving some refreshingly light moments that liven up the often stern and forbidding proceedings in our courts. The author himself is a senior advocate in the Bombay High Court and has been practising for sixty two years. He gives some glimpses of sharp wit and humor, of legendary lawyers like Nani Palkhivala, Sir Pherozeshah Mehta, M R Jayakar. The book is a good read and I have been distributing to a few lawyer friends and wannabe lawyers since.

Here's a sample: "A member of the Bar carrying a number of law books was greeted in court by his client with the words. "I thought you lawyers knew all the law." "Yes, we do", said the lawyer. After a pause, he continued: "Oh, these books  - they are for the judges."

February 25, 2010

"Maro Charithra" Audio Review


Mickey J Mayer has scored some refreshing music than the usual 8 1/2 beat songs he did for movies like Leader, Kotha Bangaru Lokam etc. A product of Trinity College, London - Mickey J Mayer can turn out to be Tollywood's AR Rehman if someone can help him with variations possible in percussions and re-arrangement. Mickey has definite strengths in melody-making and orchestration. This movie has one or two outstanding numbers which are, boldly, not re-mixed numbers of the old Marocharitra - that legendary K Balachander movie which has haunting melodies of M.S.Vishwanathan - the Guru of Maestro Ilaya Raja. Malay Palay Magadivo  and Yeh Theega Puvvulo may not be as good as Originals but they cast their charms on your senses, lingering on.

February 24, 2010

And now, In-Train magazine!


In-house magazines and In-flight magazines, we heard. But In-train magazines? Sounds new and exciting, right? A Hyderabad-based company - Intellium Media Consultants Pvt.Ltd has started India's first In-train magazine for the South Central Railways, released on 11th December, 2009. The magazine called  "Shades of Life" seems a promising new magazine, distribted freely to passengers (not for carrying) in AC Coaches of trains criss-crossing the South Central Railways. Considering that the SCR ferries over 20 lakh passengers every month, its a monster of a market too big to ignore for any publisher. The magazine is slick, finely produced with elegant editorial content and glossy pics with 200 gsm variety. Looks like Railways and Reading are finally going together decades after writers like Ruskin Bond, Winston Churchill, Jim Corbett, Khushwanth Singh enjoyed the experience of reading in the Great Indian Railways. Next time, you are in AC Coach, don't forget to ask your copy of "Shades of Life" and do drop in to give your feedback. I hope this gets bigger and better across Pan-India Railway network in due course.

February 23, 2010

Excellent Photography by Scott Stulberg



Check this website for some stunning visuals which blend traditional and digital photography. Scott Stulberg, googling further reveals, is a teacher and a professional in photography and is one of the most-revered photographers on the planet. He seems to make the most unobstrusive settings come alive. Photography, like social networking, is increasingly embracing technology - and Scott seems set to ride the cutting edge for many years. Savor his samples in: http://www.asa100.com/ and read about his art and workmanship in:  http://jrphoto.wordpress.com/spotlight-interview-photographer-teacher-scott-stulberg/

"Bindaas" movie review



"Bindaas" movie starring Manchu Manoj Kumar is a contrived attempt to rehash all the comedy fares which have hit the screens in the last two years - from "Dhee" to "Ready". The movie tries to concoct comedy at every turn of 24-frames and almost succeeds but the audience is tired of such upbeat nonsense. Comedy bores, if overdone. Watchable if you have bindaas time!

February 22, 2010

"Leader" Movie Review


"Leader"  - Sekhar Kammula's attempt to show leader distinguished from politicians is mostly unconvincing and lacklustre due to limitations self-imposed - his style of sober story-telling, no emotions or cinematization (except unnecessarily so towards end) and little entertainment. By attempting to address cleansing the political through dubious means and equating every politician as a crook except the hero, Sekhar has missed many points - his world only seems black or white, not grey. One expected more homework and attention to detail. The movie's highstand moments come in just two or three scenes but thats not enough to be the ideal launch for Rana Daggubati - he looks impressive, though.

February 17, 2010

What the Dog Saw and Other Adventures by Malcolm Gladwell



Malcolm Gladwell - an iconic writer on the hidden extraordinary in the ordinary things - weaving patterns with or without empirical evidence. After The Tipping Point, Blink and Outliers, comes an eclectical collection of his favorite pieces from his favorite magazine The New Yorker   - written from his days as a Staff Writer since 1996. The book is a delicious read for Gladwell fans - and covers conceptually blockbuster ideas for his next book - the reason some choke and others panic, the reason why there are many kinds of mustard but only one kind of ketchup, the hazards of statistical predictions, the trouble with personality tests and intelligence tests, the history of the world through the evolution of hair dyes...the list is indefatigably long and multi-faceted as Malcom Gladwell is truly. There's a piece about late bloomers where he says that Genius, contrary to popular opinion, has nothing to do with precocity; infact the best writers, painters and directors made it big in the late fifties and sixties. For fans of Gladwell, this is not just a curious case of what Gladwell thinks is - its the curious case of dramatic patterns in everyday life.

"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...