Thursday, January 28, 2010

Mile Sur Mera Tumhara

In tune with, pun intended of course, with my current state of mind of cribbing against anything substandard, I would like to trash the new “mile sur mera tumhara” video that is being telecast now on television. This reincarnation essentially belongs to the same category of Karzzz and Sholey (RGV ki Aag) and brings out the following points:

  1. The population of India has grown a lot in last 20 years and hence all these additional hero/heroines from Bollywood needed to be accommodated.
  2. The egos of these people are inflated and all of them wanted separate screen space for themselves.
  3. Shah Rukh Khan misunderstood the meaning of phrase - “passion towards one’s own country” and portrayed the same expression in this video as he did in “Suraj hua maddham”.
  4. Salman Khan had to compromise with a vest because he was not allowed to take off his shirt.

Let put an end to sequels and remakes…

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

This is a test

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Friday, January 08, 2010

Aman ki Asha

From my office, I can see a huge billboard displaying an advertisement for “Aman ki Asha”, a joint program by Times of India and Jang Group, Pakistan for peace in the Indian Subcontinent. It is supposed to be a people-to-people initiative type of confidence building measure between the two countries and any such programme should be encouraged. Everything about this initiative is in right spirits.

However, as a common man of India, I do not feel connected with this initiative. For me, this is just another full page advertisement in TOI, very much like the Mercedes-Benz ad that came last week. The objects of both these ads remain unachievable for me. I don’t know about Pakistan, but in India TOI has roped Amitabh Bachchan to represent the Indian face. Somehow I am reminded of the other campaign Mr. Bachchan was part of - “UP me dum hai, kyonki jurm yahan kam hai”.

If they were really serious about it, why not get the man from street in Bangalore, Mumbai, or Karachi and ask him to act in such commercials? Why not have reruns of Dhoop Kinare or Bakra Kiston Par on Zoom?

Call me cynical, but this too will fizzle out in a few days and in no time TOI and its sister channel Times Now will be back to their jingoistic campaign against the Government, ISI, the Army and all the related institutions in Pakistan. I am sure Jang will resort to the same cheap tricks on the other side of the border.

Saturday, January 02, 2010

Multiple Idiots

For the new year, we treated ourselves with a Hindi movie in a cinema hall after 1.5 years. We went to see “3 Idiots”, which turned out a treat to watch. It is an excellent movie with almost no loose ends.

When I came home in the evening, I figured that this really is a story of multiple Idiots. There was a full spat on television. The producer Vidhu Vinod Chopra got offended on a question regarding sharing of credits with the writer of Five Point Someone, Chetan Bhagat and asked a journalist to “shut up”. With such dirty laundry being washed in public, I felt like the first Idiot who went and paid for this movie. I should have just waited for the DVD to come out.

The second Idiot is Raju Hirani. Raju, if you really lifted the “setting, characters, plotline, dramatic twists, one liners, message – almost all aspects” from “Five Point Someone”, give due credit. I am a blogger who writes on Astrology and hates it when people copy passages from my astrology articles and post on the web as their own. Chetan is at least the author of this book and deserves something better. Even when I copied assignments and xerox’ed others’ notes at IIT, there was an implicit, heartfelt gratitude - “tu God hai, boss…”.

The third set of Idiots is the pair of Aamir and Vinod Chopra. Guys, shut you mouth and let Chetan make some noise. Your opinion has even less weight than mine. I actually paid money to watch this movie.

Lastly, in my very humble opinion, Chetan Bhagat is also a pretty big Idiot. Dude, lets face it… your novel is not a work of literary genius. It is a five pointer story through and through. I did not feel either happy or excited or surprised while reading it. There was nothing that I already did not know. My first reaction was of indifference and felt I would have had much more fun during a cack session with my wingies.

Raju and Abhijat took this five point something story and modified it to score a nine point something, making it a rare case of a movie being better than the novel. The best elements that make this movie a pleasure to watch are not present in Chetan’s book, however fantastic they may sound. Whether it is a moron pissing on a spoon/light bulb or the “aal is well delivery” happening in a hostel mess, it comes from the mind of these two writers. Chetan’s book does not have the irony of an inventor being discovered dead using his own invention. There is no Sept 5 and Laddakh angle in this story. Chetan’s heroine is nowhere as charming as Kareena.

Someone might argue that such characterization is not possible in novels – to which I would like to politely direct to the Harry Potter series (which score a perfect 10, btw). My suggestion to Chetan is to only ask for as much credit as the book really deserves. Also, I would like to ask everyone to remember the fate of the other movie “Hello” based on the other novel “One night at the call center”.

If “3 Idiots” is a big hit, it is not because of 5.someone’s plotline, but because of the treatment it got from the writer/director. They could have as well walked into any IIT, interviewed a couple of hostellites and got the plots from there. Chetan’s book was successful, no doubt, but what really matters is excellence and success naturally follows excellence, jhakh mar ke.