Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Happy Birthday, Robert Frost.


Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim
Because it was grassy and wanted wear,
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.


- Robert Frost. 




Thursday, March 20, 2014

When Love Arrives.

Dear Love, 

You always come unannounced to me at the wrong time, at the wrong place and sometimes in the wrong time zone. In spite of you being a non-cooperative guest, I always have been thankful to you for your visits, be it for the briefest rendezvous at some random place, or for those unplanned events with beautiful misunderstandings when everything seems to fall in place, or for meeting me in the most outrageous circumstances that which makes me believe the affair to be some kind of a melodramatic cosmic event. Nevertheless, I have always enjoyed your wonderful company and our interesting conversations. It makes me feel alive.

I hope you are well where ever you are. If you are planning a visit, do consider stopping by. I shall be more than delighted to meet you again and catch up from where we left.

Truly Yours,
Me.





Thursday, March 13, 2014

Mystical Mirage


I stood in the midst of the buzzing street
waiting for the one, I long to meet

time stood still, heart beat grew loud
the  glimpse so magical, as he drew himself out of the crowd


The twinkling eyes made my heart sing
like melody of birds in first morning spring


The mystic breeze of this sheer ecstasy
turned everything more beautiful than it was supposed to be.

His One flirty smirk and my heart flew high
on gossamer wings through the cloudless sky

crazy fantasy; the rush of adrenaline
sudden kick, like a shot of Gin

As gazed into me his soft heavenly eyes
‘Boom!’ gone was my common sense with inanity reprise

Inability to think sensibly struck my heart
I thought ‘Damn! What a start!’

The sense, the touch, as he held my hand

swept me off my feet to a distinct land

Melted away this sudden brief tryst
like the evanescence of the morning mist

as if a leaf caught in the wind carried him away
vanished he suddenly like a phantom, as a memory of yesterday.


Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Old Reel Redux


Having recently watched ‘The Apu Trilogy’, a film by Satyajit Ray, rightly regarded as one of the best works of literature in the history of world cinema, I cannot help but put in my thoughts about this classic masterpiece. The trilogy  composed of ‘Pather Panchali’ or ‘Song of the Road’, ‘Aparajito’ or ‘The Unvanquished’ and ‘Apur Sansar’ or ‘The World of Apu’ is based on two Bengali novels Pather Panchali (1929) and Aparajito (1932) written by Bibhutibhushan Bandopadhyay. Having won the award for Best Human Document in 1956 Cannes Film Festival, the film dialogues certainly has an impeccable literature touch. Portrayed in a lucid fashion that even with limited knowledge of bengali (someone like me) can completely identify with the depiction of characters and storyline effortlessly.
The films set in Bengal in the 1920s, articulately offers a sublime purity of sensitivity and maturity of the time when life was traditional and hard in the rural areas of India. As the movie proceeds, the myriad ‘Mono no Aware’ spectrum of the trilogy stays in the mind of the audience bounding them to contemplate the quintessence of a fine film. Like a divine hum of the pious bird of good omen, it affirms the simplicity and elegance of a cinema, no matter how far in our cynicism we may stray. Bestriding way beyond pretentiousness, the unprecedented and universal cinematic exposition of abandonment and independence in the film effortlessly creates a world of its own enticing the audience into it that it makes one feel part of it. The trilogy filmed between 1950 and 1959, a period when prolific realm of Indian film industry had conventionally stayed within the narrow confines of swashbuckling musical romances; this piece of art altogether established a new cinema for India creating an impact about the films of one’s own culture.
With the artistic scene like train roaring at the far end of a field, representing the desire of a child to know the world and the promise of the future, at the same time connecting and separating the characters throughout, foregrounding the strong feelings of human relationships the films benchmarks the realm of ideas of  director’s cut. The first film, ‘Pather Panchali’, has a relatively simple plot largely consisting of a series of short, loosely connected vignettes tracing out the life of a poor Brahmin family with head of the family, Harihar (Kanu Banerji), who dreams of being a poet, bringing Sarbajaya (Karuna Banerji), his pregnant wife, and Durga (Uma Das Gupta), his daughter, from Benares back to the ancestral rural home. The young family also takes care of an aged aunt, Indir Thakrun (Chunibala Devi). The sheer artistry of the tenderness of the heartwarming bonds, the authenticity of beauty and lyricism, and the portrayal of death, poverty and deprivation with the emotional ride of love, mirth, grief, energy, terror, disgust and anger, undeviatingly connects one to subconscious. In the fading of the light, as the 80 year old, stooped double, deeply wrinkled, Chunibala Devi, sings in the movie in her sad feeble voice, “Hori Din To Gelo, Sandhya Holo, Par Koro Amaare” meaning “God, the day is finished, evening has descended, now please take me across”, it completely embodies the brilliant classicality of  an artistic production.
The second film, Aparajito is about estrangement between the mother (Sarbajaya) and her son Apu (who goes to Calcutta to study) causing her acute pain, loneliness and eventually death. The most extraordinary turning point in the trilogy is in the third film Apur Sansar, when Apu, an unemployed graduate, goes with his best friend, Pulu, to attend the wedding of Pulu's cousin, Aparna. Aparna, played by 14 year old Sharmila Tagore characterizes the impeccable brilliance of her acting skills even at such a tender age. During the wedding, Apu gets married under extraordinary circumstances to Aparna, who later in the film dies during childbirth leaving Apu alone and shattered. Apu blames his son (Kajal) for Aparna’s death and swears never to see him but later unites with him after 5 years taking him along to Calcutta.
If you have an inclination towards art, this would be one of the best films you would ever come across. The Trilogy hinging on instantly recognizable aspects of the human condition with the penchant for close-ups, the dramatic zooms, the occasional submission to simple melodrama and the sheer lust for life is a work of an absolute unimpeachable integrity which only a few films makers of the world have matched, and Ray is undoubtedly one of them.