Thursday, 19 November 2015

REMEMBERING MY DEAR, BELOVED FATHER ON HIS 81st BIRTHDAY

My Papa didn't preach.

He never needed to. He lived his life as a fine example of how it should be led; with courage, simplicity, humility and grace. He possessed an immense amount of inner strength and iron-clad will power to withstand any kind of adversity. People who knew him will vouch for his courage of conviction and tenacious temperament. His abhorrence for any kind of vulgar display of lucre and power was also well known. 

The life-lessons I have learned by just observing how he led his life are invaluable personally and relevant inter-generationally. His magnanimity touched and enriched a number of lives in his lifetime.

His passion was singing, his prized possession his harmonium. His biggest luxury was his Fiat car (loyalty meter ran high). His sole indulgence was the Benarsi paan. And this when he could have very well afforded a fanciful lifestyle. It takes a rare kind of person to 'choose' simplicity over the extravagant, hedonistic way of living.

Life is harsh, especially when it takes away our loved ones. It's up to our hearts to hold all the memories, our minds to stroll through them intermittently and our souls to bask in their glow. You can't bring back to life the ones gone but you can relive them and feel their presence by virtue of fond remembrances.

As I just did!

Happy birthday to you Papa, in heaven and beyond. 
Proud to be your daughter.

Thursday, 12 November 2015

PREM RATAN DHAN PAYO...a dated melodrama

"He has the personality of Gautam Buddha," said Salman Khan about Sooraj Barjatya, the director of his magnum opus, Prem Ratan Dhan Payo, who has presented the Diwali fare after a sabbatical of 16 years. 
Undoubtedly, the director's goodness of heart and love for squeaky clean relationships, strong filial bonds and straight-laced humour comes forth emphatically. Lavish sets, magnificently built palaces, ten tuneful songs with ten thousand people gyrating in sync present a stunning visual. The pluses end there. Ek raja, do rani, sautela bhai, sauteli behene, double role (crown prince vs Commoner), mistaken identity, neglected rajkumari, sheesh mahal (and that too by a Niagara like falls) - sounds quite like Amar chitra katha of 1980's, doesn't it? That's how antiquated the wafer thin plot of PRDP is! No layering of characters, no engrossing palace intrigues, no sub-texts to the supporting cast, are some of the loose ends which flounder this marathon of a movie (almost 3 hours long). Salman Khan is endearing but subdued, Sonam is pancaked pretty, Anupam Kher and the rest of the cast are lacklustre infront of the cinematic opulence which overshadows the proceedings especially towards the second half when it becomes a documentary on bhai-dooj !
Barjatya ji, aap is Diwali bahut sara ratan aur dhan payoge (for the trade pundits have predicted it to be a megahit) but hum audience entertainment nahin payo.

Thursday, 5 November 2015

Shh....

Talking Toms, Just Chill!
Are we talking too much? Are Indians getting too verbose? Is India on the brink of a verbal volcano? Well, it seems so! Every Tom, Dick or Harry is talking, over each other, sometimes in tandem, but often at cross purposes. Everyone has an opinion on everything! Bizarre. Any stray comment on communalism, religious affiliations, intolerance etc. is turning non-entities into celebrities and celebrities into pariahs. Sad and disturbing. Are things really that bad or are good people talking a lot about the perceived bad stuff, making it appear really ugly? 

An aware and enlightened 'junta' is an asset in any democracy but firing loose cannons at the smallest pretext is stretching things to pitiable limits. Freedom of speech is breeding motor-mouths with ample public platforms to spurt out verbal volleys at an alarming speed. Let's not pay heed to the overactive, hyperbolic social media and channels making mountains out of a molehill.

 Get real, talk real, act real, folks. Pseudo-intelligence is passe'. Talking per se isn't bad as long as it's issue-related and not accusatory and counter-accusatory, setting off unsavoury chain reactions. Every statement by a celebrity or a politician does not merit a full throttle gang-war. Chide, chuckle and move on. It's as simple as that.