Being Sudhakar

Saturday, August 26, 2006

When the Indian Flag flew 'upside down'



On Wednesday, when Sania Mirza won her first round match at the Forest Hills Women's Tennis Classic, 'rediff.com' reported this story in its sports section. I guess not many people noticed that in the fourth slide of that slide show, 'our' Indian flag was flying upside down.
http://specials.rediff.com/sports/2006/aug/25sania-sld4.htm

If you see, the report reads -
" The Indian flag flutters alongside other national flags at the West Side Tennis Club at Forest Hills. "

Wouldn't it have been great if there was a note there pointing out the organisers mistake in having hosted the flag upside-down.

Well, I am no politician or a bureaucrat or any other high-ranking official to make a hue and cry on this one. But I am a proud Indian nevertheless. This flag is my identity. Its like sticking your photo in a passport, upside down. And that is why it seems so strange to me that nobody found this out. Maybe everyone was too busy staring at Sania.

I don't know about others, but I like my flag the correct way up.

Friday, August 25, 2006

Hunt... Play...



That is the rough translation of the title of the tamil movie that I got to see on its first day of release this Friday - Vetaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu. And luckily, I did. Had I waited for some more time to catch it, I would have definitely got no tickets, and would have missed seeing such a great movie for a long time.

Man... The movie rocks. If you had loved Gautham's last - Kaaka Kaaka, you will love VV. It is sort of a sequel to his previous 'Police Story'. The slogan for the movie says - "Another episode in a Police Officer's life." And if you are someone like me, who loves his share of 'serial killer' movies like - Silence of the Lambs, Seven, The Bone Collector, etc, then you are in for a treat.

This is maybe the first big tamil film to truly benefit from the TN state Government's law to have no entertainment tax for films with a tamil title. And also perhaps one of the few films that did not pose much problems to Kaml Hassan - title-wise. Barring the title, everything else has an international feel about it. Something that we've come to expect of Gautham. If you thought Surya was great in Kaaka Kaaka, check out Kamal Hasan in Vetaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu. For the 3 hours of the film's duration, he IS DCP Raghavan. For a man of his age, to look so cool and suave, is an outstanding achievement. His physique and charisma would surely put the 'new' heroes to shame. He simply rocks, big time.

Kamal's intro is cool. The fight scene during the initial credits, with Harris Jeyyaraj's - "Karka Karka..." singing in the background, sets up the tempo and mood for the film. DCP Raghavan comes to Madurai, to investigate the gruesome murder of Rani, daughter of the City Police Commissioner Arogyaraj (Prakash Raj) his close friend and mentor. Rani was brutally raped and body decapitated and her finger hung as a dristi kair along with three green chillies and a lemon, outside her house!

A devastated Arogyaraj and his wife immigrate to New York where they are butchered in their Long Islands house. This sets Tamilnadu police thinking and Raghavan takes up the assignment of tracking down the killer as it was Arogyaraj’s last wish. The rest of the film is how Raghavan with the support of Anderson, a New York police officer and the FBI tracks down the suspects who are serial killers!

There near his hotel room, he saves Aradhana (Jyothika), who tries to commit suicide because of a broken marriage. The two become friends and roam in the aesthetically shot New York city. Kamalinee plays Kamal’s wife who was killed by some Tirunelveli goons in an encounter, in the flashback. She looks lovely, and does good in the tiny role given to her.

New York looks beautiful in Autum, and the night time aerial shots are fantastic. Especially in the "Manjal Veyil..." song. I kept fantasising about when my 'on-site' trip would come. There is a cool joke in the movie - When Jyothika meets Kamal in a restaurant, she asks him as to why he is in New York. "Are you into Software.." she asks. "Enna software-a? Illanga. Naan Hardware. Police" quips Kamal. Jyothika is sufficient in her role of Aradhana, but she hasn't got much to do. Kamal and Jyothika's is a sweet, matured love story, but they lack chemistry. The background score is brilliant.

But what may put-off some people, is the violence by the killers. It has a graphic and gory depiction of the violence against women. Video footage, dim lightings, and the excruciating details of the murders give a chill. Body count is definitely very high in this movie. Remember Balaji, the friend of Surya's in Kaaka Kaaka, who betrays Surya and lets the villain know about his whereabouts, and later shoots himself when he finds his wife dead? Well he plays Amudhan. He and his friend, are the crazy maniacal serial killers. Their reasons for the kills are absolutely bizzare, but I guess that's what serial killers are. They are ok, but maybe a bit of over-acting. The second half lags a bit, but the ending makes up for it. Gautham plays with the audience in the last portion of the film, but sure does make us smile. Crisp dialogues, haunting camera work, and wonderful songs, comparisons with Kaaka Kaaka are inevitable. But Gautham outperforms himself, and has set even higher standards for his next films. This movie was a long time coming, but is absolutely worth the wait.

Gautham Menon and Kamal Hassan... take a bow.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Drinking Seawater - Sick !!!

It was again one of those sensational news that is flashing across all the news channels since friday. You can't blame them. There has been nothing interesting happening since Prince's rescue or maybe a couple of movie releases that the news channels are so busy promoting as 'news'. So when a salt water creek near Mahim beach, 'mysteriously' turns sweet, you'd expect news crew to be out there covering the sensational story.

I feel sad at the entire episode. Whether it is the news hungry media, all ready to make a mountain of a mole-hill, flashing it across all channels and hyping it as much as it can. Or 'we the people' who believe this to be a word from above, run on to the beaches, drinking this water in litres, unmindful of the potential risks it might have. I don't know who to feel more angry at. Can't the people see the colour of the fluid for god's sake? It almost looked like diluted 'coovum' water (nothing can beat 'namma' coovum when it comes to pollution). And people carrying it in bottles and cans. Man, don't they get water at home? And worse still, the thing that hurt me most, were the pictures on a news channel of a toddler being given this fluid in a bottle cap, which the parent was clearly doing for the camera, which the cameraman was obviously happy shooting. Awful! Get sick if you want, but why drag the poor baby with you. And, what was the cameraman doing. Just there to shoot videos was he?

Reports clearly say that this happened because ground water got mixed with sea water and reached surface being lighter. It is a scientific phenomena, which is surely interesting news. But consuming from the very source where the entire city dumps its unhygienic and toxic waste, and giving it to children, is news for all the wrong reasons. When are we going to grow up? Fishes drink seawater, not people and babies.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Missing my 'Palace'

Not so long ago, a bunch of college kids landed up in a college far away from home, and decided to rent a house after they found the hostel too cramped, and the food too boring. They found an old, rickety chettinad house, which luckily the owner was ready to rent out to bachelors. And thus they found their palace, their bungalow, their home for 4 years. I loved my palace of 4 years, and every second of the time spent there. And yes, I miss it, big time.

Though we were staying in a place most of us would call a village, we had some neat stuff filled in, built out of our home made technology. Barani had brought in an old black and white tv from his house. It was wonderful, considering it still ran, albeit being pronounced dead in the Barani household. It was on its way to a tv shop for a few hundred rupees when Barani thought we could do something with it. A few hundred rupees and a trip to the tv repair shop later, we had our own personal tv, which only a privilleged few in the student community had. And we did not stop with that. Elay got a car audio. All of us pooled in whatever speakers we could find, I gave my walkman speakers and a single torn speaker from home, Abhi and Elayraja got a couple of small speakers, Barani gave one, and with the help of a big roll of copper wire, we started wiring up our project. Our sound engineer - Elayraja 'borrowed' a couple of our owner's earthern pots from the 'maadi' and fixed our speakers inside them. A Sunday later, we had our own '9.something' Home Theater. Move over Bose and Blaukpaunt, the sound effect was surreal. Mainly because we built it ourselves. It was a home theater in its true sense. You could hear it from any corner of our home. Right from the door to the bathroom. We had lined up our house with speakers.

There was something I devised to isolate our 'study/sleep' room from the music when we were actually studying/sleeping. At the rare occasion when a few actually had to concentrate and study something and the others felt the urge to listen to music, we set up a switch that would cut off the music to the speaker in the study room. I was so proud of the innovation, that sometimes I spent time in the room just to use the switch. Since that room did not have a ceiling fan, and our budget did not permit us to get one, I brought a tiny table fan from home that was being used in my home as an exhaust fan. That didn't work too well, and we were not surprised because we felt that more power went to the
surface of the fan than to its motor. We used it to test our electric tester sometimes watching it glow to its fullest, and sometimes to jolt up unsuspecting first time visitors to our palace. But I loved that fan nevertheless, as it stood in a corner, unrivalled, untouched, spinning away to glory.

Initially we had no cable connection. There was a cable wire running in our maadi. But we decided against the 'pirated' connection because we were honest guys. And also that the wire was very visible from the road, and any malpractice would surely be noticed and scoldings and bad words would have followed. Being the geniuses that we were, we devised a small receiver out of tin foil, aluminium hangers and magnetised needles and kept it close to the cable wire a few inches away, away from the sight of prying eyes of the cable guy. To our amazement and surprise, we got a hazy picture in the tv of a few channels. Satisfied with our achievement we sat smiling, admiring our genius on the screen. But a few days later there was an argument whether the actress in that song was Simran or Trisha or Reema Sen. Somebody claimed that it was the hero himself. And during the triangular series, when in the 40th over, the wind knocked out our reciever, we decided that it was worth getting a proper, original cable connection and shell out a few bucks every month, than getting the match status from somebody else.

We also offered our services to our less privilleged, less creative friends by letting them watch tv at our p(a)lace or setting up similar contraptions in their rooms. Our fees - Bajjis and Bondas for all of us in the evenings. Heck we were studying to be engineers. That's the least we could do. Help mankind with our expertise. Ours was a popular hangout for most of our friends, much to the dismay of our neighbours. During matches, everytime Sachin hit a four, our neighbours were hit with an avalanche of shouts, wolf whistles, screams and claps. It was an experience that all of us would treasure for our lifetime. Lying on that cliched - 'Kizhinja paayi' and watching Sun tv till late night and waking up to the beats of a 'gaana paatu'. Dancing to a rehman number in the bathroom, fighting over the channel to watch, that argument of which hero was popular, boy I miss it all. There was so much that we guys did that we would never be able to do again.

Today I have a 29 inch, Sony Wega tv at home which is hooked up yo a 5.1 Home theater. A Sony music system, DVD player, CAS, Set-top box, you name it. But I badly miss the setup that we created back in the college days. This crystal clear picture with sharp audio could never match up to that hazy picture and loud audio that we experienced in our palace. Now when I think of it, I realise, that I had left behind some friends, some experiences and some treasures when I graduated. And I am sure everybody would be feeling exactly what I do. Its just not about the things you have, its the people you share it with. Buddies - I miss ya all.