Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Movies Trivia

Some movie related trivia :

O Brother where art thou
....in which the title character sets out to make a grim, socially conscious film to be called O Brother, Where Art Thou? After the privileged director experiences hardships of his own, he decides that comedic films are of more value than self-important dramas. Similarly, the Coen brothers' movie also has the tone and imagery of Depression-era realism interlaced with a comedic element.

Gulaal
How did the script of Gulaal come about?

Chaudhary was born in Darjeeling, India. After pursuing a career in modeling and earning his degree in software engineering, he opened his own company in Bangalore. When Chaudhary was defrauded by his business partners he took an opportunity to move to Mumbai in order pursue a new career in acting. Chaudhary was inspired to write his own script after seeing the film Satya with its script written by Anurag Kashyap.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Gulaal : Rana ji lyrics

राणा जी म्हारे गुस्से में आये
एसो बल खाए
अगिया बरसाए
भबराए म्हारो चैन

जैसे दूर देस के टावर में घुस जाए रे एरोप्लेन

राणा जी म्हारे ऐसे गुर्राए, एसो थर्राए
भर आये म्हारे नैन

जैसे हरेक बात पे डेमोक्रेसी में लगने लग गयो बैन
जैसे दूर देस के टावर में घुस जाए रे एरोप्लेन
जैसे सरेआम इराक में जाके जम गए अंकल सैम
जैसे बिना बात अफगानिस्तां का बज गया भैया बैंड
जैसे दूर देस के टावर में घुस जाए रे एरोप्लेन

राणा जी म्हारे

Elections in Rajasthan : The Gulaal Effect?

Gulaal, a fantastic movie, based on a hypothetical story, in which
some Rajputs disgruntled with the Indian democratic setup, plan
to have their own rule back, as was the case in pre independence India,
was released on 13th March, 2009.

In the election results which came out on 16th May, 2009, all the
four contestants belonging to the royal families, who fought the
elections from Rajasthan, won.

Coincidence?

Monday, May 18, 2009

Hope you didn't miss it !!

Kolkata knight riders have won !
And boy, have they done it in style !
A last ball win over Chennai Super Kings, the team at position 2 in IPL.
Fake IPL Player, we are all waiting to hear from you ..

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Dynasty and India

A lot of people have pointed out the absence of young leaders
for BJP's defeat. Congress seems to have plenty of them right
now. Rahul, Priyanka, Sachin Pilot and his wife, Jyotiraditya Sindhia,
Son of Sheela Dikshit, Milind Deora(S/o Murali Deora), Naveen Jindal,
Jyoti Mirdha(D/o Nathuram Mirdha)

BJP has very few.
Manvendra Singh(Son of Jaswant Singh), Dushyant(Vasundhara Raje's son),
Yediyurappa's son etc..

Numbers may be different for both the parties but one common thing among
them is, they are all sons/daughters of existing politicians. For all the brickbats
thrown at Dynastic politics, it seems to be the only channel for producing(reproducing?)
the youthful faces in Indian politics. Is India too young,immature to comprehend
meritocracy? Is that why there are so few young faces in the so called meritocratic
organization named BJP?

BJP, what next :-)

What can BJP really do now?
It is not in power, so it cannot give loan waiver to farmers.
Nor can it give away more reservation - the two things
which have clearly worked for congress. And it's surprising.
Agriculture minister of Congress was planning IPL when
the farmers were killing themselves in his own region. As the
polls neared, they announced a loan waiver package.

Despite the mass protests, Congress went ahead with
more reservations in higher education. As a result of
which, a general category student is less and less likely
to get a seat in the engineering and medical colleges
now.

On the other hand, BJP just can't give away the Ram Mandir or Article 370,
nor can it seek apology for Gujarat Riots. It can't oppose reservations
openly. What can it really do?

Lok sabha elections : Jodhpur : Caste wins again

In these Lok sabha elections, Congress fielded a brand new candidate
in Chandresh Kumari. She used to contest from Himachal Pradesh
earlier, but this time she was flown in Jodhpur as she is a Rajput.
And, after delimitation, Jodhpur had become a Rajput dominant
constituency. And, guess what, she won ! Caste system rocks !
Jai Ho !

Election commission web site : poor job in 2009 elections

It is really disappointing. Election commission's website has put up
a really bad show in this election. I don't know how did they fare
in the previous elections though. Here is the link for candidates'
affidavits and it doesn't have affidavits of Rajasthan candidates
still(Results are out now, if you don't know). Also, the results
stopped to refresh after around 6:30 in the evening. Really sad.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

The unbearable lightness of being

I had watched this movie once. Something or the other keeps happening in my life, which makes me repeatedly utter these
words :
"The Unbearable Lightness of being"

There is something mysterious about this phrase. My mind
keeps resonating with these words every time I think of the
phrase :
"The Unbearable Lightness of being"
Below is a review of the book, I found here.

The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Milan Kundera

Kundera’s most famous novel is a complex book. Set against the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia, the story evolves around different fictional topics but could just as well be the story of real people. A man torn between thought and emotion, between love and lust. A woman who lives for rebellion. Another whose body is simply an amplifier for her emotions. Tomas, the male protagonist, falls in love with Teresa and marries her, while still having many one-night stands in an attempt to give weight (meaning) to his life. Moreover, he maintains a love-affair with Sabina.

Teresa is aware of Tomas' adulteries and cannot bear the situation, which manifests itself in numerous detailed nightmares illustrating the realities of life. For Teresa, love and sex go together, whereas Tomas believes that having sex without love is possible. The female protagonist therefore suffers from the heaviness of life, while her male counterpart feels the unbearable lightness of being. Teresa later tries to gain this lightness for herself. Most of us carry the heavy and the light, the expression of either part depending on our character and circumstances. For that reason, one can identify with Teresa as well as Tomas and Sabina too.

Kundera led me to understand that the "specialness" of relationships is not really held in the place that we tend to think it is nor manifests itself in the way that we wish. That love is not what we think it is and unfortunately can sometimes only be gained through situations that we would otherwise find abhorrent if not consumed with these feelings. Sex and love are so intimately joined that it is very difficult to distinguish between the two. Tereza stayed with Tomas knowing he spent most days and nights in another woman’s arms because she loved him, and therefore would suffer anything for him. For her, sex and love were the same thing and that is what tormented her but at the same time made her stay. Is Tereza’s acceptance weakness or a pessimistically hopeful attempt to gain love through persistence and loyalty?

The very fact that they stay together and seem to find some degree of happiness illustrates that an acceptance of a relationship that falls well short of satisfying and fulfilling hopes, is possible. Is Tomas and Tereza's tolerance of their imperfect love, their acceptance of where they have arrived at simply a reflection of the fact that you can't change the strong’s oppression of the weak? You may hate it, as Tereza hates Thomas' infidelity, but you have to accept it and move on. However, this suggestion that change can only be incremental (at best) and that basically everyone must cope with life, however awful, must be rejected. Life without dreams is no life at all, but perhaps this is the very point that Kundera was trying to portray.

Kundera plays with opposites: life and death, heaviness and lightness throughout his story. The reader can try to decide which life is happier: the light or the dark? What is "The Unbearable Lightness of Being?" It is the realization that, with no hope of knowing the right path from the wrong, there can be no wrong path. One is necessarily absolved of mistakes. The search for meaning in life leans towards the necessity of significance, which comes from a sense of weight. Are events forgiven in advance because they happen only once? But, is it also not unbearable that events only occur once as we can never go back and rectify our mistakes? Everyone wishes they could replay a past error; a lost opportunity, a lost love, a relationship that should not be. Is this not unbearable?! Is this not a weight we feel pressing down on us every day?

The novel is an attempt to identify what makes us need companionship in life so badly, trying to understand the relationships between the conflicting desires that humans possess and act upon. What makes a man leave the woman that he loves and is perfectly happy with and seek something intangible in the arms of a mistress? Why does the same man sacrifice everything he has - freedom, social status, and his life's work - only to go back to the same woman he absolutely had to leave before? Is the absence of any responsibilities and ties in life really a "lightness"? Could this absolute lightness turn into absolute emptiness and thus become unbearable at some point - a burden pulling us to the ground? It shows how vulnerable we are, and how miserable we can be made by our contradictory desires, aspirations and impulses. If you read deep enough into this novel you’ll repeatedly think, ‘he’s talking about me’.


"How can life ever be a good teacher if there is only one of them to be lived? How can one perform life when the dress rehearsal for life is life?"

Book review by Eugene Knight

Monday, May 11, 2009

Physics video lectures by Walter Lewin

One of the best teachers around, Walter Lewin.
A lot of his lecture notes are available online in video form.
After watching his videos, you wish every course had
video lectures. Here are the links for 3 of his courses :

Classical Mechanics

Vibrations and Waves
Electricity and Magnetism