Highway…

Monsoon Wedding (2001) is probably the first Indian film that I can recall which dealt with child abuse in a Hindu joint family. Director Mira Nair reveals it towards the end and just when you feel it was nothing more than a screenplay gimmick, she throws in couple of memorable scenes featuring the veteran, Naseeruddin Shah. In the end, one gets a feeling that  the issue has been dealt sensitively yet sternly atleast in those few moments on screen.

Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about ‘Highway’.

Director Imtiaz Ali uses this issue as a mere justification for the heroine’s ‘ghutan’ (suffocation) and her fascination to hit the road (as revealed in the movie). Towards the end of the movie, when he is presented with a similar opportunity, like in Monsoon Wedding, he squanders it away by limiting it to the heroine’s outburst, while the parents are mute spectators.

Having said that the first half of the film is decently written and most of the scenes keep you interested with a couple of quirky characters thrown in. It is the second half that tests your patience, with visuals dominating the proceedings and the story halting at predicted stops.

Alia Bhatt is outstanding. Period.  But the film is just too big for her shoulders.

How a Math Genius Hacked OkCupid to Find True Love

Chris McKinlay was folded into a cramped fifth-floor cubicle in UCLA’s math sciences building, lit by a single bulb and the glow from his monitor. It was 3 in the morn­ing, the optimal time to squeeze cycles out of the supercomputer in Colorado that he was using for his PhD dissertation. (The subject: large-scale data processing and parallel numerical methods.) While the computer chugged, he clicked open a second window to check his OkCupid inbox.

McKinlay, a lanky 35-year-old with tousled hair, was one of about 40 million Americans looking for romance through websites like Match.com, J-Date, and e-Harmony, and he’d been searching in vain since his last breakup nine months earlier. He’d sent dozens of cutesy introductory messages to women touted as potential matches by OkCupid’s algorithms. Most were ignored; he’d gone on a total of six first dates.

More at Wired.com

‘Oh God’: A gem of a movie…

It’s time to revisit the old classic ‘ Oh, God!’, with the news of ‘Oh my god’ remake in Telugu grabbing headlines. Refreshingly, it does not feature any lead stars of that time, and ‘God’ appears in an avuncular old man avatar, just another face in the crowd.

‘Oh, God’! is a 1977  film starring George Burns and John Denver.  The story centers on a supermarket manager Jerry Landers (Denver), chosen by God (Burns) to spread his message. Right from their first meeting when Jerry is having his shower to the last scene where God assures him about his sanity, the movie holds your interest like no other.

What’s really refreshing about the movie is that it doesn’t pontificate or play to galleries like films of the genre of ‘Oh My God’ do. Instead the movie is an interesting play on a ‘what if’ scenario and takes us on a journey with an unlikely combination of characters. The movie also gives us plenty to ponder about.

In short, it might not be ‘mass’y enough for remakes in several languages, but it is just about right for a movie lover who expects quality entertainment with a bit of enlightenment thrown in to the mix.

There are several good dialogues from the movie, and this one is my favorite, when an exasperated Jerry Landers questions why he was chosen to spread the message.

Jerry Landers : I don’t even go to any church!
God: Neither do I.

Here is a nice video on Youtube compiled by a fan.

ET, IT…and the rest