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My Favourites: More Hit English Music Videos

October 5, 2013

Baby - Justin Bieber + ft. Ludacris

Proper Education - Eric Prydz VS Pink Floyd

Don't Judge Me - Chris Brown

Crazy Frog - Axel F

Sexy and I Know It - LMFAO

Hung Up - Madonna

Womanizer - Britney Spears

Feel This Moment - Pitbull + ft. Christina Aguilera

Applause - Lady Gaga

Roar - Katy Perry

2013 TV Ads of RightFlorist.in

October 3, 2013

Mother's Day Ad

This 10 sec. video advertisement was shown on Zoom and NDTV Good Times on 10th May 2013.
 


Rakhi Ad

This 10 sec. video advertisement was shown on Zoom and NDTV Good Times on 15th and 16th August 2013.
 

Take a pledge to donate your eyes as a social duty

September 7, 2013


I don’t know any kind of statistics of blind people currently living in India. That number must be very high. All I know is that there is a shortage of human eyes in every eye bank because the tradition of donating eyes, bodies, or any other organ is very awful in India. If you read newspapers or watch news on TV regularly, you might get some idea of the reality in India. An eye is something so precious that only a blind man can understand its true value. You can’t evaluate its value by money. You might be a rich person and if God forbids it, should any of your close relatives lose his/her eyes due to any accidental or any other medical reason and therefore needs just one eye to be able to see this colourful world once again, can you just even buy only one human eye by all your precious wealth? The answer is no. I don’t know the whole world but I think organ trade is illegal in India. So, if you indulge yourself in that kind of trade either as a seller or a buyer, that would be a punishable offense. All you can do is apply for an eye in an eye bank and wait in a queue like all other applicants. Out of 1.2 Billion people in India, a large number of people belong to the educated middle class. You can imagine very easily that if most of them take a pledge to donate their eyes, bodies, or any other organs after their death, then there shouldn’t be any problem at all with the treatment of blind people or any sick person who desperately needs organ transplant to evade certain death and is expecting a light of hope that sooner than later a suitable donor will be found like an Angel. That donor might be dead at that time but his/her donation might save several lives even after his/her death. But that usually never happens in India in great numbers.

My father was born in East Bengal (now Bangladesh) and he migrated to India in 1964 to avoid religious riots. He used to live as a tenant in refugee colonies in Kolkata. I was also born in one of those colonies in Kolkata and have spent all my childhood there. The refugee colonies were the huge support base for the Communist Party of India (Marxist) or CPIM which has ruled the state of West Bengal for 34 years. They used to win elections since 1977 based on urban and other rural vote banks. I was also one of their supporters till there was a so-called “Paribartan” (Change) campaign organized by some intellectual people in Kolkata which influenced my decision in the 2011 state assembly election. That’s a separate issue.  As far as CPIM is concerned I didn’t know much about them and their history of socialism. All I knew was that Communists don’t believe in God. I also remember CPIM leader Jyoti Basu not only as the longest-serving Chief Minister of West Bengal but also for another reason. Jyoti Basu died in 2010 and I saw on TV the guard of honour and the procession with his dead body through the streets of Kolkata later his body was handed over to the authority of SSKM Hospital in Kolkata. Then I came to know that before his death, he took a pledge to donate his body and his eyes. It was inspirational and motivational for me. Later I read in the newspaper that many young people in Kolkata had followed his footsteps by taking pledges for donating their eyes and bodies.

I felt inside my heart that I should also take part in this noble effort. But if you are a Hindu by religion, you have to face a lot of religious barriers that don't come from any Hindu priest or religious leader but rather from your soul. I guess it’s the effect of four thousand years old Hindu culture that you have been brought up with and the sole Hindu concept of incarnation that indeed blurs your mind and prevents you from taking any bold decision. I was fighting with myself. A good friend of mine even told me that if my eyes are taken away after my death, I’ll be born blind in my next life. I immediately understood why such a big country like India with a majority of Hindu people, has such a poor record on organ donation. That suggestion helped me a lot to win over all my hesitations and finally, I decided that I would take a pledge to donate my eyes and body as soon as possible before something else forced me to change my decision.

In November 2011, I had to visit Nil Ratan Sircar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata for some personal treatment and then I got the opportunity to fulfill my decision. I collected the forms from the eye and the anatomy departments respectively and December 1st, 2011 was the date on which I finally submitted those forms and became the official donor of my eyes and my body. It gave me great feelings that one day my eyes would help two people to get back their eyesight and my body would be used for medical and scientific research. I want to live 100 years and see the progress and prosperity of India through my own eyes but one day I’ll be dead for sure and I sincerely hope that my family will honour my pledge on that day.


I am still a Hindu by religion and I still believe in God. I still have the habit of praying to any Hindu God while passing a roadside Hindu temple. I still have two astrological rings in my right hand which were gifted by my father for my health and peace of mind. I guess I have not yet been able to free myself from all religious prejudices. But there is another side of the coin. This kind of belief somehow makes you humble and keeps you under control because it is the fear of consequences that generally affects all the decisions people make every day for a living. I also believe that faith in God helps your mind tackle difficult situations and hard times in life and takes away some mental burden while dealing with life. This is how I see religion.

If you get inspired by my story then my effort to write this article would be successful.

Social security of the women in India

July 31, 2013


India is one of the fastest developing countries in the world. The whole world now admits that India is a rising superpower. Its economy is booming and its army with nuclear weapons is one of the best in the world. But in recent times, India itself has become the news headlines and got special attention from both national and international media for all the wrong reasons. The media was very keen to project a general view that women were not safe in India, especially in the national capital. I think that perception has not been changed yet. New Delhi came under the spotlight since the infamous Delhi gang rape which took place on 16th December 2012. It was not the first time that a rape and murder happened in India but the magnitude of inhuman characteristics and the brutality shown by the 6 perpetrators to the victims, made the people of India and abroad very very shocked and furious. The perpetrators committed that heinous crime in a moving bus without any remorse and tried to make sure that the victim wouldn’t survive to be able to bring them to justice. The victim’s male companion was also beaten severely by them with the intention to murder him. Then both of them were thrown out of the bus and left alongside the road. They were later rescued and hospitalised by the Delhi police. The male victim survived but sensing the deteriorating critical condition of that rape victim, the doctors, and the govt. of India transferred her to the Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore. But on 28th December 2012, she lost her last fight and breathed her last. Police apprehended all 6 perpetrators of which one was still juvenile. The main accused Ram Singh later found dead in police custody. This gang rape case is now sub judice in Indian courts.

On 21st December 2012, the young men and women of India erupted and formed a large protest around the India Gate in New Delhi. The protesters clashed with the police in large numbers as they were trying to move close to the Parliament and the residence of the President of India. The outrage never stopped there but spread all over India. We also felt the heat in Kolkata as the city also expressed solidarity and joined the protests. Earlier we have also seen these kinds of large protests in India especially in New Delhi in support of the introduction of a strong “Jan Lokpal Bill” led by Shri Anna Hazare. All those big protests were spontaneous and occurred without any political colour or support but organised by the non-political organisations and mostly by the youth of India. Without the participation of Indian youth in large numbers, these kinds of non-political protests and movements for social cause and justice might never happen in India. How many grievances towards our system and society were accumulated in the minds of the youth of India, the whole world came to know and was surprised to see the scale of the protests and movements that took place in India. Young generations of this era now want to change their surrounding socioeconomic structures and live without any social or religious prejudice. Although we have progressed in economy, education, health, and other fields deep inside our social structure, we almost remained the same in the last thousands of years.


India is called the “Subcontinent” because of its diversity in geography, society, language, and people. India is now the home of 1.2 billion people and has become the largest democracy in the world. Being a secular country, India has given its people the right to practice different faiths and religious beliefs. However, the social structure in India is too deep and complex to be changed overnight. One of the main aspects of society is how we treat our women in India and elsewhere. Nowadays I have been watching the news that more and more physical assaults on women are being committed in India. I wonder what is more true? The number of physical assaults on women is increasing day by day in India, women are getting out of their social deprivation and getting the courage to register complaints in police stations which they were afraid to do so in the past, or the media in India itself is gaining the fast momentum and sensationalising all issues or the media in India has now become the face of India. I think all are true but I don’t have any statistics to establish my view. But the point is that physical assaults on women must be eliminated from the society of India at any cost. Many social activists and intellectuals are working in this regard but we the youth of India must take an oath to clean our society and everybody must take care of one another and make sure that these types of crimes never happen in India. I am sure that the govt. of India is also working on all legal and social aspects and their implementations to ensure the social security of women in India.

Satyajit Ray: A true inspirational human being and my favourite writer cum movie director

July 25, 2013


The whole world knows Satyajit Ray as a great Indian filmmaker but his name first came to me not as a filmmaker but rather as a great detective novel writer. Now I don’t remember the exact year but sometime in the early '90s, my father gave me a book as a birthday gift and I was very excited by the cover photo which looked very interesting to me. It was a Bengali detective novel for kids and its name was “Sonar Kella”. I read that book and you won’t believe how much excitement and pleasure that book gave me. That detective or private investigator’s name was Prodosh Chandra Mitra better known as Feluda. His nickname is Felu and da is the short form of dada which means big brother in Bengali because his cousin Tapesh served as a narrator and he used to call him Feluda. I was a kid and I immediately fell in love with Feluda. At that time, the author's name especially Satyajit Ray himself meant nothing important to me, I just wanted to read Feluda’s detective stories. Then I started insisting my father buy more Feluda books. But I also couldn’t wait for long and therefore started asking my friends about Feluda’s books and I discovered that some of them also used to like Feluda. So, we exchanged a lot of Feluda books and then I insisted my father allow me to get the membership of a local library. I successfully made him convinced that the subscription money for that local library would have been much cheaper than buying me new storybooks now and then. So, one by one I almost finished all Feluda books. During that time, I also discovered that there was another interesting fictional character Professor Shonku who was also created by Satyajit Ray. This character Professor Shonku was a great scientist and his adventures were all based on science fiction that was the first time I started to like science fiction stories.

There is a popular children’s magazine “Anandamela” and every year just before the biggest festival of Bengal “Durga Puja”, a special puja edition is published by ABP group, the leading media group and the publisher of the most popular and commonly read Bengali daily newspaper “Ananda Bazar Patrika”. Every year a new adventure of Professor Shonku was published in that special puja edition of “Anandamela” and every year I used to wait for that special puja edition. I think every Bengali kid even the current generation’s kids loves to read “Anandamela”. But “Anandamela” didn’t have Feluda stories instead it used to get published in another magazine “Desh” in its special puja edition which also belongs to the same ABP group. Now “Desh” is not a children’s magazine but readable for grown-up persons. Despite being a teenager, I still managed to borrow some special puja editions of “Desh”. I also discovered that “Desh” was full of romantic and little adult kind of novels. So, that was how I came to know about love, sex, and some secret human emotions and behaviours which I never experienced before. Now when I see young kids, it surprises me how smart and intelligent they are now. By their age, we were quite simple and silly.

Another thing that also astonished me was that since Feluda was a fictional character created by Satyajit Ray, especially for kids and teenagers then why did the ABP group publish Feluda novels in “Desh” instead of “Anandamela”? Satyajit Ray himself regularly published Feluda novels in another children’s magazine “Sandesh” under his editorialship but it was no longer so popular in our times. Even today, “Anandamela” is still the most popular Children’s magazine in Bengali language.

Satyajit Ray was still alive by that time because I still remember that later I saw his death news in 1992. Even then I didn’t know much about Satyajit Ray. First I saw the news that he was hospitalised. But then he was awarded “Oscar” as a lifetime achievement honour. I still remember the TV footage of him laying on a hospital bed holding the “Oscar” statuette on his chest in both of his hands and he was saying something on camera. I heard from my elders that he became the first Indian to receive such a prestigious award as “Oscar”. But his health condition was still deteriorating and then I saw the news on TV that he was no more. In India, the most popular and famous persons are either film stars or cricketers. Satyajit Ray was none of them yet I felt sad about his demise. I got the same feeling again when I saw the death news of Mother Teresa in 1997. I never got the opportunity to meet both Satyajit Ray and Mother Teresa face to face despite living in Kolkata suburbs but I saw Nelson Mandela from a long distance when he was received and honoured at Iden Gardens stadium in Kolkata by the govt. of West Bengal. It was 1990 and I have a vivid memory of that incident. I was present at Iden Gardens stadium with my parents at that great reception. Now we are hearing the news that Nelson Mandela is going through a critical health condition. I pray to God for his long life and good health.

I have read a lot of novels of Sherlock Holmes who was created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and also acknowledged as the greatest detective novel character in the world. But if you also read Feluda novels, you’ll find that Feluda's stories are not less thrilling and entertaining than those of the Sherlock Holmes stories. Both Sherlock Holmes and Feluda are considered a very very wise person and both can see and explain things and clues that a normal person can’t. Satyajit Ray also added two characters in Feluda stories and they are Tapesh or Topshe as called by Feluda and Jatayu or Lalmohon Ganguli. Tapesh serves as a narrator and we see and experience all the Feluda adventures from his eyes. Most of the adventures of Feluda took place outside Kolkata and give readers a good taste of traveling and adventure. But the storytelling and the suspense factor are a little different than other detective stories. It is not the climax scene when you will identify the culprit, but within the first phase of the story, you’ll know who did the crime. But how Feluda unfolds clues one by one, beats him just by his intelligence, and ultimately traps and catches him, that is the fun you will enjoy the most. On the other hand, Professor Shonku's stories are full of adventures and science fiction. It’s like a diary in which Professor Shonku has written all his adventures. More interesting elements are the innovations and ideas of Professor Shonku which are all based on science fiction. All these Feluda and Professor Shonku stories are very very interesting to read again and again. Moreover, Satyajit Ray’s stories are fatless but healthy which means neither less nor extra words or sentences are found in his writings.

Feluda / Professor Shanku

Satyajit Ray himself directed a couple of Feluda movies based on his novels “Sonar Kella” (The Fortress) and “Joy Baba Felunath” (The Elephant God) and both of them gave so much entertainment to kids. But the most entertaining children’s movie was “Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne” (The Adventures of Goopy and Bagha). Every Bengali kid still loves that movie. Later Satyajit Ray made its sequel “Hirak Rajar Deshe” (The Kingdom of Diamonds). But the most beautiful movie that influenced and touched me a lot, was “Pather Panchali”. At that time the only television channel in India was state-sponsored “Doordarshan” and sometime in the middle of the 90s, I watched a Bengali black and white movie “Pather Panchali” on “Doordarshan”. Bengalis in nature, are emotional and sensitive and every Bengali sentiment was depicted exceptionally well by Satyajit Ray in that movie. Then I realised how talented he was and automatically deserved my utmost respect. I believe that the whole world also recognized Satyajit Ray and his talents by this particular film “Pather Panchali” (A Song of the Little Road) for the first time in history which he directed in 1955. In that movie, there were two children characters “Apu” and his elder sister “Durga”. Apu was more or less as same age as me and I felt connected with him like a friend or brother. I enjoyed their affection, their life and I also felt that somehow I became a part of their life. Then one day “Durga” became ill and died. But I felt the pain of “Apu” and I thought that I had also lost my elder sister. I have no siblings and I never experienced that type of love and affection in my life but that emotion and pain of losing somebody close to you like your sister, remained in my mind for a long time. It was merely a movie but how real and sensitive a movie might become and how a movie would affect your life, Satyajit Ray showed us very easily. He also made sequels of “Pather Panchali” as “Aparajito” (The Unvanquished) and “Apur Sansar” (The World of Apu). Satyajit Ray himself was a music composer as well and he did some music direction in his movies. I think other great Indian classical music maestros like Pandit Ravi Shankar, Ustad Ali Akbar Khan, etc. also composed music for Satyajit Ray in his movies. I don’t know anything about Indian classical music but I think you’ll find a simple yet emotional and sensitive musical pattern in all the background scores which he used in his movies. All are different yet there is a secret similarity of musical phenomenon in his movies which I can’t explain. He was a genius.

Later I saw most of his movies. But right now if you ask me to talk about all of his movies, I can’t do that because frankly speaking I don’t remember all of them but I can still talk about some of them. In his film “Ganashatru” (An Enemy of the People), he showed us how politics and personal interests can make a simple man's life bitter. He showed us how complex the relations among close family members might be, in “Shakha Proshakha” (The Branches of the Tree), “Kanchanjangha” etc. There is an old phrase “A woman's heart is a deep ocean of secrets” and Satyajit Ray successfully depicted all-female mental characteristics in his movies like “Ghare Baire” (The Home and The World) and especially in “Charulata” (The Lonely Wife). In “Charulata”, Madhabi Mukherjee acted so beautifully. All her facial expressions, body gestures, and moods were fantastically shown in that movie. Sometimes Madhabi Mukherjee didn’t even speak a word but told a lot of things just by her facial and eye expressions. I have seen some other movies acted by this same Madhabi Mukherjee but I thought I didn’t see that kind of acting anymore. I might be wrong because I haven’t seen all her movies. If I did, now I don’t remember most of them in which Madhabi Mukherjee acted in a lead or supporting role. So, you can consider that as my general perception.

Pather Panchali / Charulata

24 July was the death anniversary of Uttam Kumar who was the most favourite and popular Bengali Movie actor in the Kolkata film industry. Even today, after many years of his death, his popularity is still going high. But Satyajit Ray and Uttam Kumar worked together on 2 films which are “Chiriyakhana” (The Zoo) and “Nayak” (The Hero). I didn’t watch “Chiriyakhana” but enjoyed a lot watching “Nayak”. It seems like Uttam Kumar’s own life story. Soumitra Chatterjee, another popular lead actor in the Kolkata film industry worked in most of the films directed by Satyajit Ray. His son Sandip Ray is now walking in his father's footsteps. He is not that experimental like his father but he has also directed some good movies based on his father’s novels especially the Feluda series and probably is now working on starting a new project based on the Professor Shonku series.

My video ad for RightShopping.in

July 22, 2013

I have created this video ad and published in http://www.youtube.com/rightshoppingindia on 8th September 2012. I do not have much knowledge of any kind of 2D or 3D multimedia software and yet I have created this video ad.


Young India loves western music these days

July 19, 2013

We are being raised with rich Indian culture and traditional values but we have also been listening Bollywood music from our childhood. We have our own different types of regional music and we all love them very much according to our musical taste but nobody can deny the fact that Boollywood has and will have a major impact in our daily life, our way of thinking, romance, heroism, fight for justice etc. We love to watch Boollywood movies especially Bollywood music and dance. Even southern India cannot save themselves from the impact of Bollywood despite the fact that some Bollywood even other regional filmmakers get inspired (read copy) by south Indian films and produce their own version of creative movies. Some filmmakers love to remake old Bollywood movies and release them again like selling old wine in a new bottle. Even in the present music industry of India, you can clearly see that old Bollywood songs are being released again as remix version. Why do they do that? Is it because of new writers, music directors, lyricists and filmmakers are not capable enough to create wonderful cinemas and musics that can mesmerize us just like old days. Should we think that those golden days of Kishore, Lata, Rafi, Asha, R.D. Burman are gone along with good Hindi songs. It is true that they are all legends and cannot be replaced by anybody else even in next 100 years. But Indian music industry especially Bollywood never faced shortage of new talented music directors and singers. They are still creating some very good songs till today but I think somehow that is not quite enough for Indian music industry. Remix versions of old hit songs are equally getting popular in India and more and more remix songs are being released by Indian music industry. Why? I think the reason is business. Indian record companies always look for profit and they always follow the latest musical trend. They know that new generations of India love fast and furious type of music and record companies know that if you want to make profit, give them what they want. They are doing the right thing considering the fact that remix songs will do good business in present Indian music market.

I think somehow we the young generations of India feel that we should look beyond Indian music industry especially Bollywood in terms of finding good music. We love old Bollywood songs, disco, pop, romantic songs even new remix songs but we want more. Somehow we are not completely satisfied with current Bollywood songs. Today, hit songs are still being created by Bollywood yet our musical appetite remains unsatisfied and we are gradually leaning towards western music more and more. Earlier a small group of Indian music lovers used to have knowledge of western music but a vast percentage of young people are listening more and more western music these days. May be Cable TV, FM Radio, Mobile Phones and Internet have opened a broad window and gave us an opportunity to explore the whole world to find out more and more good music which will certainly satisfy our musical appetite.

I don’t want to get into details or find more reasons for this trend because neither I am a music critic nor do I have all musical knowledge (practically none) to judge Indian music. I have simply expressed my personal opinion.

My latest personal favourite top 10 western music videos are as follows.

1. On the Floor – Jennifer Lopez + Pitbull

2. Give Me Everything – Ne-Yo + Nayer + Afrojack + Pitbull

3. Rain Over Me – Marc Anthony + Pitbull

4. Gangnam Style – Psy

5. In My City – Priyanka Chopra

6. Enrique Iglesias - Heartbeat ft. Nicole Scherzinger

7. Beyoncé - Sweet Dreams

8. Gentleman – Psy

9. International Love – Chris Brown + Pitbull

10. Lady Gaga - Bad Romance

A movie review: “Bhaag Milkha Bhaag”

July 16, 2013

Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

Last Saturday morning, I decided to take a day off from the office and spend the day with my parents. Next Monday, 15th July was my birthday but I couldn’t take a leave on that day because of my job priorities. So, Saturday was the day for my personal celebration. Later that day, my father insisted I hang around and enjoy the day. So I decided to watch a movie in the evening show. My favourite movies are science fiction movies. So, obviously, my first choice was “Pacific Rim”. I also kept my one eye on “Bhaag Milkha Bhaag”. First I bought a ticket for “Pacific Rim” and then I thought that why not “Bhaag Milkha Bhaag” as well on that same day and therefore I bought another night show ticket for “Bhaag Milkha Bhaag”. Now I don’t want to say much about “Pacific Rim”. It was a disappointment for me. After spending so much money and so many special effects, the result is another Japanese “Godzilla” type movie in Hollywood style.

Lets talk about “Bhaag Milkha Bhaag”. What did I know about Milkha Singh a couple of weeks ago? I consider myself a moderate sports-loving person. Maybe I can say something about Cricket, but Athletics is nowhere near my knowledge or memory. I only knew that Milkha Singh was called “Flying Sikh” and missed an Olympic Bronze medal in Athletics and that’s all. I wonder how many common Indians even know about Milkha Singh. Before releasing this movie, I observed that there was media hype about this movie and Farhan Akhtar could be seen on TV channels regularly. But two things caught my attention, one was Milkha Singh himself and the second one was Farhan Akhtar with his new 8-packed body.

I think “Bhaag Milkha Bhaag” is a good movie based on historical facts. I read somewhere that Milkha Singh himself cried after watching this movie which is a portrayal of his own life. He even said that this movie resembles 95% of his life story. After watching this movie, when I decided to write about this movie, I also thought that I would have to know more about Milkha Singh and his life before writing anything at all. Now I can say that I liked the movie but I thought this movie has been stretched a little more than it should have been by the director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra. People generally want to witness the history of India with their own eyes even in celluloid. Entertainment is a factor but songs and dances by the hero himself are unnecessary in these kinds of films. Background scores or songs and title songs are more suitable but these types of movies do not need its hero singing and dancing by himself in typical Bollywood style to add more entertainment value to the movie. Maybe it is a movie-making formula viable for commercial success. Anyway, I didn’t like Farhan Akhtar singing and dancing in this movie. I am not a big fan of Farhan Akhtar for his acting but what I like about him is his body. Nobody needs to tell me how much dedication and self-control over daily routine and food habits are required besides regular exercises in the gym to build that kind of athletic but not bulky body. It looks fantastic and equally matches his character in this movie. I guess this whole project of “Bhhag Milkha Bhaag” was long-programmed and well-planned. Director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra must have thought well to choose actors for every character. Then how did he choose Dalip Tahil as Jawaharlal Nehru? It was a disaster. If you think that Dalip Tahil matches Jawaharlal Nehru, then I am afraid I have to say that I look like Brad Pit. Jokes apart, I think it was a mistake made by the director. I also think that Yograj Singh (the father of Yuvraj Singh and renowned Punjabi Movie actor) who played the role of Indian coach Ranveer Singh, took excessive make-ups. Since this movie is supposed to be considered a family movie, the director could have avoided the adult scenes in this movie by Farhan Akhtar and the Australian Actress Rebecca Breeds who played the role of Stella (the granddaughter of the Australian athletics coach who was appointed as the support staff of Indian athletics team in 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games).

Milkha Singh
Farhan Akhtar and Milkha Singh  

I want to mention especially Divya Dutta (played the role of Isri Kaur, Milkha Singh's elder sister) and Pawan Malhotra (played the role of Milkha Singh's coach Gurudev Singh) because both of them acted so brilliantly and of course, Master Jabtej Singh who played young Milkha Singh and Sonam Kapoor as Biro for their fantastic acting. Another small but good role was the Indian army instructor played by Prakash Raj. It added a little comic yet serious flavour to the movie. I will conclude this review by saying that I have seen a good sports-oriented movie after “Chak De! India” and “Bhaag Milkha Bhaag” definitely will increase interest among young Indians about athletics, the glory of winning an Olympic medal and the sense of nationality for being an Indian.

My Birthday Celebration: 15th July, 2013

July 15, 2013

It feels great being older for one more year. Thanks to my family, my team, friends and well wishers.




A movie review: “Man of Steel”

June 19, 2013

Man of Steel (film)

Last Saturday evening, I watched “Man of Steel” in a multiplex theatre in South Kolkata and I thought I should share some of my thoughts on this movie with you. When talking about “Superman”, what comes to mind first is that he is superhuman and can do anything. He has limitless strength or what we have seen in “Superman I, II, III, IV” and then “Superman Returns” in 2006 for that matter. But in the film “Man of Steel”, director Zack Snyder (the director of “300”) thought something different about the strength of Superman. If you say Superman’s strength is beyond a normal human being, what possible limit can you imagine that he can do? We have seen in earlier Superman movies that Superman can rotate even the Earth backward to get back in time, lift an entire continent out of space by bare hand, etc. Your imagination might go even far beyond that. But in this film, director Zack Snyder has shown us that there should be a realistic strength limit for a man like Superman. The word “Realistic” in a science fiction film refers to the possibility even probability of an unusual event based on science. We can accept that argument. Indeed, some science fiction films do not follow that logic and show us something so absurd that we can’t even accept the story in the context of a realistic science fiction movie. Director Zack Snyder has shown Superman as a little different than his predecessors. He looks different, tall, and handsome. Christopher Reeve, the first Superman was very good-looking and mature Superman compared to the last Superman Brandon Routh in “Superman Returns” who looked more like a college boy. Maybe there are some reasons for director Zack Snyder not casting Brandon Routh as Superman in “Man of Steel”. Although the script of “Man of Steel” is not the sequel of “Superman Returns” and it starts from the beginning, still Brandon Routh was the young and the latest actor who plays Superman. We have already seen the change of face in the Spiderman series and probably will see it in the Batman series as well because I think Christian Bale won't be seen in the next Batman movie as Batman (the last Batman movie “The Dark Knight Rises” gave us the clue) or he will, God knows. But the script of “Man of Steel” demanded a fresh face as Superman besides Brandon Routh didn’t become widely popular as Superman. But the present Superman British actor Henry Cavill is very handsome, mature, tall (Superman must be tall), and most of all more masculine with heavy body packs (director Zack Snyder has some obsessions with a gym-toned body from “300”). Maybe he’ll continue as Superman in the next Superman movies as well. We also thought that “S” stands for “Super” and maybe the people who created the famous comic character “Superman” in the early 30s, also thought of “S’ as “Super” and gave the character name “Superman” but Zack Snyder has told us in his movie “Man of Steel” that “S” actually means “Hope” in Kryptonian language rather than “Super” in English language. All Kryptonians and Humans on Earth, talk in English. Some directors use subtitles in their movies for foreign languages or sometimes, actors start talking in a foreign language and gradually the same flow of talking turns into English. Zack Snyder didn’t use any of those tricks in “Man of Steel”.

Superman

“Man of Steel” is a much more compact and tight movie in terms of storytelling and the flow of events than that of the previous versions of Superman movies. Sometimes Superman gets flashbacks but nothing has stretched the movie unnecessarily. “Man of Steel” is rather a combined story of the first “Superman I and II”. But I think the script has deliberately ignored some simple logic even as a science fiction film, just because it’ll make the movie more thrilling rather than realistic. I think those mistakes are intentional. First, both Superman and General Zod (played by Michael Shannon) referred to time as “Year”. But I don’t think an Earth year and a Krypton year both belong to the same time length. Who cares? General Zod and his associates were from the same generation as Jor-El (the biological father of Superman played by Russell Crowe) and Lara (the biological mother of Superman played by Ayelet Zurer). Now Superman grows up from infant to adult raised by Jonathan and Martha Kent (played by Kevin Costner and Diane Lane) on Earth. Like any other human being, his growth rate is similar despite being a Kryptonian. So, like Superman, General Zod and his associates should also become old but when they showed up on Earth, they all looked the same as they were punished by the Kryptonian council for their treason to deep hibernation or frozen to death in the phantom zone.  But they soon got freedom as the planet Krypton itself exploded with a bang due to its destabilized core and then General Zod and his associates started searching for the first natural-born son Kal-El (the Kryptonian name of Superman) of Jor-El and Lara because they wanted the Codex (the genetic preserver of every Kryptonian), sent along with Kal-El to the Earth by his father Jor-El. General Zod has been presented not as a complete villain character but rather as a passionate Kryptonian whose lone purpose to be alive is to restore the planet Krypton and its people by that Codex. But the Codex was implanted into the body of Kal-El by his father and to bring out that Codex by General Zod, Kal-El the Superman has to die. Nothing comes the way of General Zod as ethical, wrongdoing, or even crime. He is focused on his goal. But when it comes to the future of Earth itself and General Zod wants to rebuild Krypton on the fossil of Earth (Terraforming), the only force that stands between General Zod and his goal, is Superman. The climax of the film shows a dramatic fight between General Zod and Superman and then General Zod is killed by Superman. Now this final fight happened in the middle of Metropolis city and caused lots of destruction. Isn’t it wiser for Superman to take General Zod outside the city to avoid that much destruction? I am afraid, the decision was not taken by Superman but by the scriptwriter himself. Because what kind of war ground makes the fight more dramatic and interesting, a city or a desert, you decide. In the end, Superman wins, Earth is saved, end of story. But it doesn’t. Superman then joins Daily Planet as a Photographer cum Reporter. How did he get that job? Did Lois Lane (played by Amy Adams) refer him for that post? No. She didn’t even recognize Clark Kent as Superman (even I’ll recognize Amitabh Bachchan or Shahrukh Khan in their make-up a thousand times)! If Superman rather than Clark Kent has to take a job to hide his true identity, why did he become a Fisherman rather than a Photographer or Reporter in the first place?

I’ll conclude this article by writing about some supporting characters in this movie. First, Perry White the Editor in Chief of the Daily Planet. It’s a cameo played very well by Laurence Fishburne. There is nothing new to say about him. I have loved his acting from the first time I saw him in the “Matrix” trilogy. Next and last but not least, is Faora, the second in command after General Zod. Frankly speaking, the character Faora is much more attractive and sexy than the girlfriend of Superman, Lois Lane. This character is played by Antje Traue whom I saw for the first time in “Pandorum” and liked very much. Unfortunately, the character Faora is dead in this movie and the same Amy Adams will be seen as Lois Lane in the next Superman movie if not changed.

By the way, let me add one more point here. We used to mock Superman that he wears underwear on top of his suit instead of underneath it. I like the present suit of Superman. It looks normal.