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Saturday, September 22, 2007

Ganesh festival: Sidelights



Missing the noise

Agreed. We want the celebrations pollution free, even noise pollution. The death of an elderly woman in Kolhapur, aparently becasue of the noisy Ganapati procession passing by her house causing her to death, has put all those huge sound boxes standing haughtily near each Ganapati mandals in the city under scanner.
But then, what’s the festivities without the sound of it?
Remember the good ol’ days, when you can hardly sleep for those 10 days becasue of all the noise on the street? Remember being immune to that dance number becasue you have heard it for more than a thousand times.
The festivities now have acquired a quieter form. There is no raunchy dance number making your nerves numb. The sound boxes are either quiet or playing Ganesh ‘vandana.’
But walking through the city post-midnight, from one mandal to another may not be like what it was earlier, especially when there’s no noise to give you company.
We sure would learn to adjust with it, hopefully.

The popular among them

Who’s is the celebrity Ganapati among the Ganapatis? The answer is easy: Dagduseth Halwai, who else? Everything works for Dagduseth, the popularity, the location and the grandeur, everything. The year, the pandal is luminating to the likeness of the Akshardham temple in Noida, Delhi. And the sea of humanity that preceeds the mandal at any time of the day would tell you about the populatiry level. If that’s not enough, just look at the volunteers at one corner of the mandal, who are tirelessly shorting out a big heap of coins and currency notes that devotees offered as ‘dakshina.’

Mandal magic

Talking about mandals, in most cases, the Ganapati idol is just an excuse; something else hogs the lighlight. At Hirabuag, it’s an episode from mythology, the incarnation of Lord Vishnu’s Narasimha avatar, with semi-automatic statues playing and replaying the scene before the eager visitors. At Grahak Peth, it’s a house made of biscuits. Mouth-watering indeed!

Walk, eat, celebrate

Eating out is one of the major attractions of the festivities. The eating joins near the mandals are open till the early hours of the morning, and no one is complaining. The owners are doing brisk business, the workers are getting extra money. But don’t they want to go out themselves? Yes. That would be on the last day.
But one bhel-puri vendor near a park isn’t so enthusistic about the festival. Becasue, these days, very fews people visit the park. and his business is poor. So, he has finally decided to close his shop and take his family for an evening out, for a change.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

The Dragon Tale Without Fire



Eragon
Directed by: Stefen Fangmeier
Starring: Edward Speleers, Jeremy Irons, Sienna Guillory, Robert Carlyle, John Malkovich

Why Harry Potter was so popular and not the other fantasy novels? The answer is simple. Unlike most other fantasy tales, Harry Potter is not based on some far-flung land where everything is different. Harry s world is modern England, and the way the story is told is modern as well. The magic in the tale is just accidental, not something consciously pre-decided!

Therefore, Eragon's Alagaesia would not be embraced by the public unless you try a little too hard, something that Peter Jackson did in The Lord of the Rings.

Copying LOTR would not serve your purpose. That's where the film Eragon fails.

No problem with the Christopher Paolini book though. Though heavily influenced by Tolkien, Paolini's book is a bestseller at best, and automatically needed a screen adaptation. And to make a long story short, Stefen Fangmeier's film is not even a patch on the book. It's sad to see how the screenwriter and the director failed to tap the rich mythology of the book in the film version.

The story had all the possibilities of a fantasy, a Middle-earth like landscape, warriors astride mighty dragons, a viciously cruel king (John Malkovich, underplayed) and an unlikely hero, a farm boy who chances upon a dragon egg and now its his destiny to be the first dragon rider after many years, the last hope of the free people of Alagaesia.

The possibilities were immense, the star cast, Jeremy Irons included, to die for, the landscape magnificent and the CGI dragon, with Rachel Weisz's voice, cute to say the least yet the film falls flat. Something was missing. It s not easy to pinpoint what, probably the hurry to film the film, probably the failure to make the fantasy stand up.

The film looks good. You can watch it once. After that, even Jeremy Irons look dull, and once he s dead, you don t really care what s going on and when it s going to end and how!!