Saturday 18 November 2017

PADMAVATI ROW--Much Ado About Nothing

History and fantasy are a heady mix if the cocktail they brew is intoxicating enough. Why not take a sip and then decide?

Art is an expression of free-flowing ideas and creative imagination, unhindered and boundless, limited only by the law of the land. Why force it to tow the line each time, to please all, on mere conjectures and preconceived, ill-informed, beliefs? Why not celebrate the grandiosity depicted tastefully -- as evident from the visuals released so far? If past performance is any indication, Padmavati promises to be a feast for the eyes and the ears. Savour it as such! 

In any case, valour and vandalism are not each other's substitute and those who equate the two are masked cowards. No sane society should encourage such people. 

Pride and prejudices have been mankind's bane for a long now. Time to conquer them like a true warrior! That'll be the ultimate victory for civilization.

Thursday 5 October 2017

Newton- new age cinema

To be honest, I hadn't heard about the movie 'Newton' until last week. Someone recommended it and upon probing I found that it was a movie about a government clerk trying to run a free and fair election in a conflict area in central India.

The brief seemed singularly lacklustre.  Starcast was minus stars. What would it be like, I wondered? Political, trite, edgy, preachy and dark, sans the colour and razzle-dazzle I was clamouring for after a month of gruelling chock-a-block exam schedule of kids? Why not Judwa 2, a definite holiday bonanza, I asked my family but they unanimously voted for Newton and I went in with the least expectations. But as the story unfolded, the magic began. 

This low budget, offbeat movie with fine actors and riveting direction has proved that quality can never be the exclusive domain of showbiz's big guns. Devoid of razzmatazz, any gravity-defying action scenes (Isaac Newton would be happy) or romantic escapades, it shines beautifully on its own. The backdrop is Naxalite insurgency but the focus is on the dutiful, stern, living by the rule-book, election officer called Newton, enacted masterfully by Rajkumar Rao. Intense yet funny, it makes you don your thinking cap while enjoying your giggles. 

The apple has fallen. But it hasn't bitten the dust. The great scientist won't stir in his grave. 

Friday 18 August 2017

FABULOUSLY FOOLISH! (IGNORANT IGNORAMUS OR DELIBERATE DUNCE?)

"Looking smart!" You lap up the comment with a glee unmatched even by the TV series of the same name.

Is it really so important to 'be' smart and more importantly, 'look' the part? It sets me rolling on a path to decipher the differences between the Smart Alecs and the Foolish Peters of this world. The Alecs have it good initially, the claps of schoolteachers and the laps of mummies, a generous salary, an indulgent boss, and a preening girlfriend. Then the pressures build up, the expectations skyrocket and the demands quadruple.

Contrary to popular opinion, it is not always wise to project yourself as smart and intelligent. The more capable you project yourself, the greater the onus to prove yourself worthy every single time and be a picture of sanity and sagacity forever. The challenge to maintain your gray matter in peak condition can be exceedingly taxing at times. Keeping yourself abreast with the changing winds and the meandering currents in the ocean of knowledge is no mean task!

It is in this context that the stress-free life of the fabulously foolish folks can be envied. They can be just themselves...normal, grounded, partially ignorant, funny at whim, openly inquisitive at times and completely imprudent at other times, rejecting the expected standards of intelligence. This elite group has members from all cross sections of society and cuts across the gender barrier. It can be anyone....an ordinary office or college goer, an average shopkeeper or a self-contained homemaker or a retiree.

Well! What are the perks of being Fabulously Foolish?

For one, you live life on your terms. You are carefree. You don't live to please people. You don't have to 'be' smart or 'act' smart all the time. Ignorance is bliss and who better to testify to this than our FF. You don't give opinions about issues not concerning you.You avoid trouble and confrontations. You are forgiven all misdeeds and faults because you are, after all ....'foolish' !!

Another category is of Smart Alecs pretending to be foolish to suit their purposes. They are the cunning and conniving foxes hiding under the garb of simplicity and faking foolishness for ulterior motives. They plot and plan their own games and if it backfires they feign innocence and pass the buck to their sweet foolish selves which erred unknowingly. Normally such tribes aren't taken seriously because the human mind is conditioned to be cautioned and challenged by intelligence and ingenuity but ignore and overlook the witless and fatuous lot. This tendency abets the nefarious mindset of wily folks.

In stark contrast to the Fake Foolish are the genuine ones, those lovable, trusting simpletons born with a silver spoon. They are fabulously rich and fabulously foolish too. They have a coterie of chamchas and Man Fridays around them. They thrive on sycophantic chatter and can be likened to the Emperor-with-no-clothes.

A lot of so-called intelligent crop has grown recently courtesy the blessings of Baba Internet. The homilies and sermons are coming our way at breakneck speed. Every Tom Dick and Harry is now a preacher teacher. It's easier to pass on knowledge especially when it's abundant and freely available. Jai Ho, Whatsapp! It is a breathless time catching up with the world buried under the information onslaught. There no time to pause or ponder. No urge to internalise. No knack to sift the sacred from the profane. Just playing carriers of 'passing the parcel' of borrowed knowledge (real or fake) and thriving on it, inadvertently giving rise to the faux news syndrome.

The challenge is to remain 'intelligently innocent' so that you retain rational mindset without having to surrender your soul's simplicity at devil's doorstep.

Monday 17 July 2017

Lessons from History via a Poem by Kedarnath Singh

Kedarnath Singh (born 1934 AD) is a well-known Hindi writer and poet. He was awarded the 49th Jnanpith award for the year 2013. He is the 10th Hindi author to receive this prestigious award. 

One of his celebrated poems is shared below. I have tried to analyse it, interpret it, and draw my conclusions as per my understanding. Hoping that it resonates with fellow citizens.

सन् ४७ को याद करते हुए / केदारनाथ सिंह

तुम्हें नूर मियाँ की याद है केदारनाथ सिंह?
गेहुँए नूर मियाँ
ठिगने नूर मियाँ
रामगढ़ बाजार से सुरमा बेच कर
सबसे आखिर मे लौटने वाले नूर मियाँ
क्या तुम्हें कुछ भी याद है केदारनाथ सिंह?

तुम्हें याद है मदरसा?

इमली का पेड़

इमामबाड़ा

तुम्हे याद है शुरु से अखिर तक

उन्नीस का पहाड़ा

क्या तुम अपनी भूली हुई स्लेट पर

जोड़ घटा कर

यह निकाल सकते हो

कि एक दिन अचानक तुम्हारी बस्ती को छोड़कर

क्यों चले गए थे नूर मियाँ?

क्या तुम्हें पता है

इस समय वे कहाँ हैं

ढाका

या मुल्तान में?

क्या तुम बता सकते हो?

हर साल कितने पत्ते गिरते हैं पाकिस्तान में?

तुम चुप क्यों हो केदारनाथ सिंह?

क्या तुम्हारा गणित कमजोर है?

INTRODUCTION--

Experience the pain and pathos of partition of India in 1947, so palpable in the simple lines above.

Apparently, Noor Miyan (standing for a prototype Muslim) was poet Kedarnath Singh’s friend and/or neighbour in the pre-independence era. That was the time when Hindus and Muslims lived in harmony and cooperation.

Partition brought a lot of destruction and heartache in its wake, the tremors of which can still be felt. Families, neighbours, communities, all lost touch with each other and could only wonder about each other’s whereabouts. Those turbulent days rocked the peaceful boat for eternity.

The 1947 partition of the country into 2 distinct countries forced Noor Miyan to leave his job, his home, his family, friends, and life at Ramgarh, now a part of India and relocate to some district in the newly founded Pakistan.

ANALYSIS OF THE POEM--

Noor Miyan- Noor stands for Divine Light/Jyoti while Miyan refers to Islam. Noor Miyan living in RAMGARH, the abode of Hindu God, symbolises Islam living in the fort of Hinduism, in a small, subtle and inconspicuous way. Living peacefully, drawing its resources from the society, by trading ‘Soorma’ (used to beautify others) and working hard but quietly in the Hindu-dominated society, Noor Miyan represents a minority community and the integral part it played in the scheme of things.

On the other hand, the Hindu society was providing the physical and spiritual space (Madarsa, Imambara) to Muslims. The tamarind tree, providing cover to both Ram and Noor Miyan, alludes to the nondifferentiation by nature on the basis of caste or religion. Overall, it was a society where peaceful coexistence was present and nurtured. This tamarind tree is later contrasted with one across the border that we know nothing about. Basically, Noor Miyan is uprooted from the life he has known and banished to an unknown place to satisfy the cold, calculated split proposed by the politicians.

People who claimed to provide better destiny for all, applied mathematics and logic in the matter of partition. The north side of the land which was Hindu-dominated went to India; the south side which was Muslim-dominated went to Pakistan. The whole society was divided upon the parameter of logical reasoning, with complete disregard of the social-emotional bonds which had been holding it together for centuries.

The harmonious bond built over generations was snapped in one jolt. The poet laments if the religious harmony, social affiliations, mutual trust and cooperation which held Hindus and Muslims together for generations, are so fragile that they can be heartlessly divided by arithmetic calculations.

And can a small social, religious unit (Noor Miyan) be implanted in the same religious unit but different social, geographic habitat -Pakistan? What will happen to him? He knows nothing about this new place (does not know many leaves on the tree). Will he gain or lose? A more pertinent question: do we even care what happens to him or do we conveniently forget about people who were an indelible part of our shared history?

At the end of the poem, the poet exhorts his conscience, “tum chup kyun ho Kedarnath singh?” ..referring to the fact that he has no answer to the question plaguing those affected by the mass- disruption of partition.

He is anguished by the loss of his dear friend and tormented by his own helplessness.

The poet’s disgust and self- loathing is sarcasm-laden in the last line, “kya tumhari garit(maths) kamzor hai?” The poet is really not expecting an answer. It’s not arithmetic but the helplessness and inability of the common man to accept the complex divisive-politics, the solution to which is a mirage till date.

The loaded message is that you can't sever the intangible connections by employing arithmetic and that adding or subtracting to divide a country is not the right solution. Such deep message is conveyed in an everyday language by the poet, in very pithy lines.

CONCLUSION--

Hinduism, which radiated in the glory of other faith for centuries, lost its sheen when it took shelter in rationality and decided that Islam has no place within.

The ‘Noor’ of Hindustan, as a magnificent, pluralist, multi-religious, multi-faith, multi-sectarian society, gradually faded into oblivion while we were napping. 

The said poem may have been written in the partition era but it has tremendous contemporary relevance.

The bloodshed, displacement and the chaos that India suffered in the aftermath of its partition in 1947 still has lingering effects. The seed of enmity sowed therein germinated into a full blown rivalry with our erstwhile companion. It has been a divorce gone wrong. The price of alimony has been steep in the form of 2 full-scale wars and the recurring Kashmir conflict leading to massive loss of lives and property over the years.

Has it been worth it??

We may have advanced economically, technologically and scientifically but our mindsets are still archaic and thought-processes bound by shackles of caste, religion and the accompanying disparities which hinder our blooming into a forward-looking, progressive nation with liberal values and ethos.

The ‘idea’ of India as a secular nation, promoted by Nehru-Gandhi-Patel after its independence, had given the country a semblance of order and stability. Unfortunately, the concept of ‘Unity in diversity’ is being threatened again and the same divisive-politics, with its proven counterproductive results, are being practiced unabashedly.
The Sad part is, the gullible ‘junta’ is playing cheerleaders while India dances dangerously to the tunes of our conniving politicians and their machinations.

Mr. Kedarnath Singh, ‘hamari garit kamzor hi nikli’, for our forefathers made a grave miscalculation some 70 years back. While it may be juvenile to seek a historical correction,it would be prudent to cut our losses and strive to stride towards the halcyon era of tolerance and compassion. Afterall, these twin virtues were the cornerstone of the country we claim to love dearly!


Friday 26 May 2017

PET NAME PEEVES

What's in a name? A lot, apparently!

Babloo, Bunty, Pappu, Chintu, Sweety, Gudda, Guddi, Lovely, Baby, Pinky, Chinki, Chhotu, Sonu, Monu ... are just a few examples of the popular pet names that are lovingly bestowed by Indian parents to their offsprings in childhood, the reasons being many.

 Firstly, in India, the newborns aren't given names immediately in the hospital (as is the western norm) but only after an elaborate 'namkaran' ceremony. 
Then, there's the almighty tussle between the grandparents, parents, and hordes of aunts and uncles over a suitable name for the precious newborn. Picking and choosing one name that'll be acceptable to all requires management skills which will put top managers to shame.

Naturally, till such time an official name is given to the child,(which may take months or even years), he/she needs an identity. Enter that sugary, syrupy pet name which seems tailor made for that roly-poly, adorable, cute little infant. He soon starts responding to it and it sticks to him like the thumb that he keeps sucking in his childhood.
Even after the child getting a suitable official name, the elders in a typical Indian family refrain from using it. 

Sometimes, it is to protect the sanctity or exclusivity ("there are terrible 'naam-chors' lurking in the families looking for unique names"); other times, it may be too difficult to roll off the tongue. 

Whatever the case maybe, pet names are easier on the tongue, less stressful to remember and despite their commonality (every family has at least a couple of these), the pet names last lifelong much to the chagrin of the owner of these not-so-exclusive names.

Imagine a 30-year-old adult being introduced in a family function as Mr. Gupta's Babloo. The poor guy seethes inside, itching to reveal his official name but the extended family is least interested in it.

"Hi, I am Shashwat Misra, Mr NK Misra's son". Blank looks meet you. You are then compelled to prod the clueless audience, Remember, Sweetu?? Oh yes, of course, "toh aise batao na!!" Hugs and warm handshakes welcome Sweetu into the fold where Shashwat was a persona non grata!

"Chutki, Idhar aana", Mrs. Khatri calls out to her daughter, eager to introduce her to a bunch of prospective mothers-in-law. Imagine the eye-popping reactions when a 5 feet 8 inches tall, gangly girl strides in with a fierce expression. She, of course, hates her pet name but has to respond to it because her mother has all but forgotten her formal name.

A female relative of mine started insisting that we call her son by his official name, Sarthak instead of the hitherto used 'Gappu' after his marriage for it won't look appropriate in front of his wife and in-laws. We were all amused and a tad irritated by her supercilious facade but went along with the directive. Imagine my dismay when after all the ceremonies were over, she asks my husband to join for a group photograph, "Arre Bunty, idhar aao!" Grrrrr....I was incensed at the hypocrisy but my husband outsmarted her by saying, "I will only sit next to Gappu's wife". Needless to say, she went 50 shades of red while we chuckled at the fiasco.

Mind you, these pet names last a lifetime. I have met a 60-year-old Mr. Khan being referred to as Chote miyan by his gracious 78-year-old mom, Bubbles. She proudly parades her bubbly self and rotund 'Chote miyan' giving two hoots to the sniggering community. And, 'Baby' Mausi will be referred as such notwithstanding the fact that she is now a grandmother!

Hindi film industry has bulky, teddy bear like Kapoors with the cutest pet names- Dabboo, Chintu etc with the former's daughters being called Lolo, Bebo (Karisma and Kareena for the uninitiated). Govinda has a weird Chichi name while Hrithik is Duggu. How comfortable they are with their pet names is debatable and dubious. 

Life's tough for the pet names' victims. They grin and bear the atrocious name tags which do nothing to define their uniqueness or distinct personalities. It's as if they are a product of mass production, branded and labelled as per the flavour of the month. 

Pet names sound cute in childhood but outlive their utility thereafter. 
Unfortunately, they can't be done away with and the only way to survive them is by not responding to them after a certain age. People and family will gradually and grudgingly learn to remember the formal name. 

No such guarantees for mothers though, who will be hooked to her Guddu and Sonu lifelong, propriety be damned!

Sunday 21 May 2017

INSPIRATIONAL MOTHERS

Mothers everywhere are special. Indian mothers are renowned for their selfless sacrifices, devotion, and loyalty towards their families. They live their lives for their families whose happiness is paramount to them.  

An average Indian middle-class (nothing average about her worth) housewife plays a pivotal role in bringing up an entire generation with different aspirations and goals. She plays the cook, the washer, the nurse, the teacher, the guide, the sounding board, the agony aunt for her entire life.

If she's a homemaker, then all her waking moments are for the welfare of her family and if she's having a job outside the house, she's doubly challenged to manage both with supreme efficiency.

 I tried finding one particular mother (apart from my own deceased mother) whom I could dedicate this article to but failed to single out just one individual as my inspiration or role model of motherhood. 

I find myself surrounded by umpteen number of strong, tenacious, spirited women of lower, middle and upper strata of Indian society who are no longer content being the sacrificial lambs or devoted slaves. They are finding their grooves and learning the ropes to handle both - their familes as well as individual growth.

Happy mums are the best and women are gradually rediscovering their worth and saying no to any kind of bullying, abuse, bias, or nonsense. This newfound self-confidence of Indian women is inspirational in itself. 

 My maids, representing the socially and economically backward class of society, are inspirational mothers too. They are practically illiterates but slog day in and out to give a decent education to their children. They don't want their kids to grow up as house-helps, rather want them to get educated and find a decent job. One of the maid's daughters has passed highschool and takes tutions while pursuing higher education. They are proud kids and do not suffer from any inferiority complex. I salute the vision of these mothers who push their children to reach higher goals in life.

A neighbour of mine, Mrs Sinha died last month at the age of 82. She had become a widow just 7 years after marriage and inherited the responsibility of raising 3 kids single-handedly. Rather than wallowing in self pity, she did her post graduation, took up a teaching job and was a strong, self-dependant mother. She ensured that all her kids got well settled in life but even in her old age she chose to stay in her house and not with any of her children. She gave them love, support and wings to fly out of the nest guilt-free. No wonder the kids and their spouses held her in the highest esteem. She inspired others around her with her strong willpower and fighting spirit.

I find women achievers who manage both home and office efficiently, highly inspirational.

I find the selflessness of the homemakers who give their hundred percent to their home, hubby and kids all through their lives highly inspirational.

 I find mothers who push their children towards excellence highly inspirational. Simultaneously I also find mums who let their children be themselves and make their own choices in life, very inspirational. 

For I believe that there can be no custom-made category for 'Inspirational Mothers'. Each mother has certain special qualities in her which are unique to her, her situation in life and which define her role as a mother. 

I find the average Indian mother scaling new heights in recent times and striving to achieve excellence for herself and her children. They are pushing boundaries and learning to be self-motivated. There's a still a long way to go till the mothers get their just desserts but atleast the walk has begun!! And that in itself is so inspiring.

Thursday 18 May 2017

SARKAR-3

 
Brooding was never so stylised before. Amitabh as Subhash Nagre, 'Sarkar' for the masses, carries the trilogy forward in his inimitable style. There's tension, darkness and edginess to the drama. Much of the Sarkar legacy is carried forward with new characters thrown in. There's a heavy reliance on body language. Minimal dialogues, taut postures and nuanced facial expressions speak louder than words, adding to the gravitas. 

The story line can literally be told in a line or two.
Sarkar's aura is in jeopardy due to his ever spiralling band of enemies, desperate to dislodge him from his exalted position. His trusted lieutenant, Ronit Roy and grandson, Amit Sadh work at cross-purposes and form a maze of intrigues and machinations. 

However, there's not much suspense in the second half where the plot is a dead giveaway, with the grandson presumably joining the bad guys to finish his grandfather and the latter too vowing to finish off the last of his lineage! Like, seriously RGV? 

Another jarring fixation which realistic cinema's flagbearers have, is with the lighting or the absence of it infact. Whether it's a cost cutting measure or some mistaken belief that 'dark is dangerous', almost half the movie, daytime scenes included, are shot in absolute dark. You peer hard to make out the characters present in a particular scene. Somebody please shed some light on this style of direction!! 

The highlight ofcourse is the Ganesh-vandana sung beautifully by AB in his robust baritone and picturised graphically by the deft juxtaposition of religious fervour, criminal intent, rivalry, loyalty and deceit.

 The hard-hitting Govinda chant and the background music enhance the proceedings esp that slurping sound of the tea, drunk from a ceramic plate, in the last scene. It spelled satisfaction and triumph. As per Sarkar's taste! It was his cup of tea afterall, blended and brewed to perfection. 

I recommend the movie to die-hard AB fans looking for an engrossing cinematic dalliance this weekend.
Enjoy your cuppa!


Monday 27 March 2017

PHILLAURI Review

PHILLAURI-- Unspirited and tame!
Anushka Sharma's ghostly self-indulgence churns out a ghastly two hours plus insipid fare which is neither entertaining nor frightening!

Oscillating between the love stories of a contemporary urban couple (with the ubiquitous indecisive NRI groom, incessant marriage ceremonies, a scotch sipping grandma), and a star-crossed couple of pre-independence era (rustic Punjab, numerous folklores, sepia hues, patriotic backdrop), the movie does justice to none.

Little to laugh at, less to empathise with; the strain of not identifying with either set-up leads to a complete disconnect with the drama unfolding laboriously.

Ironic that a movie starring a bona-fide ghost lacks soul!

Tuesday 7 March 2017

WONDERFUL WOMANIA!

Come 8th of March and the better half of the world goes into a frenzy. The non-stop barrage of feel-good messages, inspirational quotes and motivational memes permeate the environment. Women are made to feel special and privileged by everyone. Men are on backfoot and wary of this new insurgent women-power which threatens to dislocate their firmly established supremacy in all things that matter.

Feminists brigade go on a rampage, dismantling the age old, rigid shackles and moribund traditions which hold women enslaved morally and socially. How appealing that sounds and how liberating too!! It's as if all the hot talkshows and cool social media memes have actually made a difference to the status of women in India!!

Most of us revel in this extra attention given to us around Women's day and some 'gullible us' actually start believing it.

Unfortunately, we happen to live in a bubble, for nothing actually changes for us. There are some cosmetic changes (few upbeat articles and sundry cheers) but the ground reality remains the same.

The majority of women continue playing second fiddle to the men (sometimes women too) in their lives and a substantial number put a facade of happy faces while tending to their broken spirits and shattered dreams. The homemakers are shortchanged for they never get their dues or enough credit from their families or society while the working women are invariably forced to compromise on their professional and/or personal front despite slogging it out. Both remain frustrated, envious and wistful about not having had a better shot at life!

Ladies, those of you who sail in the same boat as above, its time to swim out of deep waters, come to the surface, catch a deep breath and take stock of your life. Only one question needs to be asked of your inner self, 'Are you content with your life the way it is?' The answer to it will pave the way for your future course of action.

To those ladies who are actually happy doing/being who they are, the self-appointed moral guardians of society needn't judge them.

For eg. -

If mrs.Khanna is happy doing nothing else but being a socialite or painting the town red with her kitty party gang then so be it. We can't look down upon her for her perceived frivolity.

If mrs Gupta is happy being a stern school teacher and giving tutions while hating cooking, we can't condemn her for lacking 'homely' skills.

If Mrs.Khan likes to keep 40 days roza yet wear jeans and dresses outside her home, then we can't label her a hypocrite.

If Ms. Tina/ Rina etc.is a successful professional at 30 plus with a steady boyfriend and in no mood to get hitched, we can't criticise her supposedly 'loose character' or whatever!

As long as these females are happy in their state of life, whether out of choice or circumstances, the world and his wife have no mean business casting aspersions upon them.

One significant social observation I've made is that a sizeable chunk of women have had their choices made for them by their parents and later their husbands but they are happy nonetheless, because things have worked out just fine for them and they have no complaints whatsoever with their lives.

Hence any debate of women empowerment or 'making your own choices in life' etc etc has no relevance for them. They need no dictates or homilies. They would rather laugh at people trying to prick pins in their contented life by insane talks of womens lib. According to them their happy state of mind gives them wings to fly and feel liberated.

In contrast to this enviable breed of happy-go-lucky women, there are the 'silently suffering souls' who go through the gamut of daily life with discontentment and disillusionment. They are the ones who ought to reassess and rethink about their lives and how to better it. Gaining confidence and becoming assertive are 2 good ways to have a say in your own life and changing the status quo if it makes you uncomfortable. Stop putting yourselves last. If you have the courage to say," I don't feel it is right" or "I don't feel like doing it right now", you are a living breathing example of women's liberation.

So women of the world & especially of my country, I urge you to live life as confident, content human beings without apologising for your gender or treating it as a handicap. It shouldn't be used as a tool either to gain leverage in sticky situations.

Women, irrespective of their nationality, religion, economic & social status, are a wonderful marvel of God and so let's respect our creator by respecting ourselves first. Others will follow suit!

# happywomen'sday

Tuesday 21 February 2017

THE POWER OF MATURED LOVE ❤

Love has got to be world's most potent and most volatile emotion. The amazing thing about romantic love is that it is unique for each couple depending upon their relationship dynamics. And every couple's love story has its own graph- the ups vs downs, intense vs indifferent, comfortable vs annoying etc..their love travels through different phases at its own pace and is never static.

If we talk about matured love or love between a couple in their forties, who have been together for a considerable length of time, then it is very different from the puppy love or youthful infatuation between a younger couple.

After years of being together, the attraction and combustion is replaced by compassion and understanding. You don't count the hours to meet at a restaurant looking your best, rather you count the hours when the hubby returns from his office carrying the bakery or stationary stuff you reminded him to bring home. Instead of you rushing to greet him with a warm hug n kiss, it's the kids who overtake you in exchanging pleasantries. Any privacy is no longer sought to jump into the bed for action but to slump down and slowly share the day's hectic happenings. Priorities change gradually and before you realise you become uncle and aunty from Bhaiya and Bhabhi. The wrinkles and grey hair crop up surreptitiously and catch you unawares. Piles of extra kilos surface over the years and you stop weighing yourself for fear of landing into depression.

Life is tougher now but infinitely more fulfilling. From making plans for your own future you shift to planning for your kids' future because you know somewhere you have peaked professionally and personally. At forties, love becomes a homogenous mixture of respect, companionship, appreciation and dependency. The sore points have been sorted out and the irritants ironed over. Trust and loyalty are the two pillars of a long standing relationship. After investing heavily(emotionally and physically) into your partnership you want to keep it going.

Love in forties is stable and secured wherein you bask in your partners care and attention. It's gentle and soothing unlike the brash and fervent youthful love. It completes you and defines you as an altergo of the other.

Life begins at 40s some say, love too comes onto its own during this time after the jittery, nervy, volatile initial years of courtship, matrimony and series of adjustments in your relationship. It settles finally into a soothing, calming presence in life. From occupying the centre stage for years altogether, it receds to the background but does not fade away. It becomes firmer and more grounded. It intensifies into a solid, secure sea with none the nervous energy of youthful spring.

But love till 40s stays strong only if nurtured properly. Negligence and/or bickering takes the sheen away from it and it shrivels up to die forlorn and lonely.

Like life, love is most unpredictable and the only certainty attached with it is its longevity. Love outgrows life and generations and the best love stories are not of your college sweethearts but of you parents and grandparents. Even if procreation is the goal, love gives it a glamorous avatar. Falling in love and making love makes the world go round and are root causes for many of mankind's wars and progress.

There is no debating the power of matured love and like vintage wine, the older it gets, the better it tastes!

Three cheers to LOVE, the elixir of life! Drink it, savour it and preserve it.

Monday 30 January 2017

RAEES Review--

Get your filmy 'battery' recharged because SRK has arrived in a swashbuckling avatar. His kohl-lined glinting eyes, stubbled face, and oodles of style and swagger offer the most likeable anti- hero of recent times. He is 'heroic' in his misdeeds, a rebel with a cause, a devil cum messiah, an outlaw who makes his own rules, only to break them at will. 

Here is a guy who does the bad so well that the good guy (Nawazuddin as an honest cop) is mentally berated by the audience for hounding Raees and not letting him live in peace (ironical because SRK's activities are the antithesis of peace in its lowest common denominator).

Raees gives an ideal platform to SRK to showcase his histrionics in a larger than life role, deeply reminiscent of the 1980's action movies of Amitabh. A not so subtle homage to the superstar is there in a clip from his movie playing in the background. It recreates that milieu and tempo, where an underprivileged young boy seethes at anyone who calls him 'Battery' for wearing spectacles, and at one time uses it as a weapon in one of his encounters with a rival to drive the point home. It reminds you of AB when he epitomised the angry-young-man in all his gory and glory. There is the ubiquitous Mother with her gospel one-liner ("koi dhanda chota nahin hota" etc) which is the game changer. Then there is the mandatory best friend-confidante-lackey Sadiq and of course the pretty dame with shy smiles and 'tears with fears' filled eyes. Mahira Khan seems skittish and underprepared in her role and disappoints. A pity that she floundered at probably the first and last opportunity opposite the king of romance.

"Baniye ka dimaag and Miyan bhai ki daring" - the tagline is used famously throughout and justifiably so. The 'catch-me-if-you-can' games that Raees plays with his rivals, ranging from the initial benefactor turned hostile adversary Jairaj (Atul Kulkarni) to the backstabbing partner-in-crime Musa bhai( Narendra Jha), and finally his bete-noire, SP Majumdar (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) in a unidirectional role of a man determined to bring Raees to justice, are riveting to watch. Their scenes together are electrifying and the one-upmanship confrontations are engaging till the end. 

SRK owns the character in a flourishing, no-holds-barred manner. Whether it is flying kites or bashing goons, doing the 'garba' or butchering the enemies in a meat shop, the guys does it all with aplomb! The affectations are worn like a second skin and there are no pretensions whatsoever of presenting a realistic cinema even though it's supposedly based on the life of a real-life bootlegger in Gujarat. Cinematic liberties are taken aplenty, none of them are jarring.

'Main aa raha hoon', SRK kept saying and the man does truly arrive, as the showstopper in this catwalk of filmdom lions. 
All dirty and delicious!