Thursday, June 30, 2005
Wednesday, June 29, 2005
Top Dialogues from Hindi movies
However, inspite of having this dedicated person penning the dialogues, most of them are quite banal and used repeatedly in various films (e.g look here, here and here). Still some quotes like 'Kitne aadmi the' transcend the cliches and live in our memories. So I set out to compile the top 10 memorable/classic quotes from Hindi movies. Lists are always subjective and I am by no means a voracious watcher of Hindi films - hence I may have missed some - anyone reading this are welcome to come up with their own list or add to this.
(Additionally, one could argue quite persuasively that all good dialogues are either in Sholay or uttered on screen by Amitabh - but I have tried to mix things a bit).
10. Dosti ki hai - nibhani toh padegi - Maine Pyar Kiya : I know, I know - very tacky - but it had become quite famous at the time of its release. Also I had to have one 'romantic' quote.
6. Paanch ruapiya bara ana - Chalti Ka Naam Gadi - the most memorable monetary transaction ?
5. Babumoshai.... - Anand
3. Mere Paas Maa Hai - Deewar - One of the very few times perhaps when Amitabh's co-actor has run away with the better dialogue.
2. Mogambo khush hua - Mr. India - Rahul has an entire post on this.
1. Kitne aadmi the - Sholay - I am sure there will be very little arguement on this. (Btw, check this post)
Other contenders:
Chal Dhano! Aaj teri Basanti ki izzhat ka saawal hai - Sholay
Hum jaha pe khade ho jaate hein, line wahi se shuru hoti hai - Kaaliya
I am sure there are some more out there - can't remember them now.
Thursday, June 23, 2005
Now in my possession...
Handsomely bound in leather - encased in an industrial strength cardboard box (seemed to weigh a ton - but officially 18 pounds I am told) - almost all of the Gary Larson's wonderful comics, arranged in chronological order along with an assortment of his own comments, hate/fan mail, explanation of some of the panels etc. A must have for all Far Side lovers.
Wednesday, June 22, 2005
Australian cricket team spooked...
Wednesday, June 15, 2005
Book-tag
Since its about books I cannot resist:
Last book I bought: Two books really - and they were actually bought by the aforementioned sister @ Kolkata and sent over to me here - Rahul Bhattacharya's 'Pundits from Pakistan' (an excellently written and detailed coverage of the Indian cricket team's historic visit to Pakistan in 2003-04 with perspectives from both on and off the field - click the link to read the review by Jai Arjun) and Samit Basu's 'Simoqin Prohecies'.
Note - the book jacket claims that it is the first Indian science fiction fantasy novel - I hope that means in English because at least in Bengali, three generations of Rays have produced some magnificient works of sff.
Anyway, here goes my attempt:
In no particular order ( book or sets of books):
1. Satyajit Ray's Feluda, Prof. Shanku and the short stories (Ek dajon gappo etc.) series: Ray took up writing for children in order to revive the 'Sandesh' magazine and they turned out to be so popular that he kept going at it until his major source of income used to be from the sale of books. Thank god for that - Bengali literature, especially children's literature is all the more richer for that.
The Feluda series used to be (and perhaps still is) the regular staple of not only Bengali children but many adults as well. I remember waiting with baited breath for the Puja-special edition of Desh magzine which would chronicle the latest exploits of Feluda (Prodosh Mitter) - a self-employed sleuth - of middle-class Bengali origin, a bachelor, in his late 20s-early 30s with a keen sense of observation and a thrist for knowledge and an excellent physique (uncommon for most Bongs !) - joined by his innocent and somewhat naive but faithul nephew, Topse ('good name' : Tapesh Ranjan Mitter). From the thrid novel onwards ('Sonar Kella' - later made into a film) the duo is joined by the venerable Lalmohan Ganguly, who writes pulp-thriller novels in Bengali under the pseudonym Jatayu and can always be relied on a few good laughs.
While the Feluda novels are very popular, IMHO Ray's best writings are in the short-stories. Published in quanta of a dozen (mostly with a couple of Feluda shorts at the end), they almost always dealt with ordinary people - their hopes, aspirations, fears and most of all their fantasies. More often than not the stories would also venture into a supernatural world. It would take a whole different post to deconstruct his stories but I beleive that Ray is the true succesor of Tagore in the genre of Bengali short-stories (Tagore having practically introduced short-stories to Bengali literture which had been dominated by novels and verse till then).
Okay - so now you know where the inspiration for the nomenclatures in this blog comes from ! (except for the title - which is a common enough term used to describe the typical Bengali addas and also the name of a movie made by the unsung but no less taleneted Ritwik Ghatak).
3. Jonathan Livingston Seagull - I read this at a rather impressionalble age of 16 - the desire to do something outside the flock still remains.
4. Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - A trigoly of five novels - 'nuff said.
Surely someday Ron Howard will be compelled to make a movie out of this - wouldn't that be a tragedy !
As I said, it was a difficult choice so here goes some honorable mentions: Padma Nadir Majhi by Manik Bandopadhay, books by Asimov (particularly his short-stories), Clarke (the Rama series more than the 2001 Odyssey), LoTR, and the collected works of Sukumar Ray.
For a more wholesome list of books I thoroughly enjoyed reading (and re-reading in many cases) check out my profile.