Friday, September 21, 2012

Keep running to stay at the same place…


The GPA race is as thrilling as GTA! Well, not quite. But it does give rise to interesting situations and diverse emotions. After all, in the current scheme of things, grading is relative. So all that matters is where you stand relative to your classmates.
Intuitively it might seem that the best way to handle this in the interest of the overall batch is to ensure that no one studies for the exams. However, can each student trust the others not to study? What if someone breaks the “agreed code” and studies secretly? Given the two situations that the others might study or may not study, it might seem to a random student that studying is the safer strategy. At least he won’t be left stranded at the lower end of the GPA spectrum and well, there is this chance of actually doing well in the exams! Now everyone might think this way and end up studying thereby eliminating any relative advantage of studying that any one might have. What we have is Prisoners’ Dilemma in the academic setting in a new multi-player avatar.
Can “collusion” be implemented to solve the problems arising out of, let me dare term it – Students’ Dilemma? The problems are many: How to monitor effort? How to design a “punishment” for detractors to deter them from “cheating” (which ironically, in this context means studying!)? How to ensure that a student doesn’t get mistakenly punished for doing well in the exam by chance or by sheer ability? And the questions continue…
Consider a hypothetical scenario where students to agree to spend a specific and significant amount of time in the common area everyday so everyone watches over the other. Students can choose to watch movies or play games and everyone gets to watch what the others are doing. This will leave a reduced time for any prospective “cheater” to study extra in his/her own time. Ideally the system should be monitored by a third party, but what option do we have in this case? The teachers supervising students to ensure they don’t study enough? This doesn’t seem to be a feasible idea.
Social ostracism can be a potential punishment, but the Chatur Ramalingams of the world wouldn’t care. And if one person “cheats” or defects this way, then others also have an increased incentive to study.
It seems that we are stuck with the best response strategy of putting in significant efforts in studying after all. And anyway, if we agree on studying being a means to learning and not merely grades then the equilibrium where everyone ends up studying a lot, isn’t at all undesirable.
So, get back to your books.
As Groucho Marx said, “Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read.”

Monday, September 17, 2012

"I would have loved to do it, but..."



How many times have you mentally cursed your project team member for not putting in the required effort? And how many times has the feeling been mutual? Well, there is no end to this argument as “effort” in most of the cases is not directly observable.
In general we can say that free riding happens in groups due to the presence of people whose pay-off matrices look somewhat like this:

Hence (goof-off, goof-off) seems to be the Nash equilibrium in such a situation. How do projects get done then? I’d say that’s due to the presence of members whose pay-off matrix looks different from this perhaps because of behavioural reasons. Those persons would perhaps derive “utility” out of moral, responsible behavior. However, designing a free-riding proof system will have to concern with the “problem children”, not the ethically high people. The solutions will either have to increase the pay-off for working hard or decrease the pay-offs for goofing off. Both can be approached by steps taken at
1            1. The group level itself amongst the members
2            2. Institutionalizing some mechanisms
1.  At the group level, before every project meeting, each one can be asked to come prepared with a write-up covering the problem issues and suggested solutions. The meeting can then be used to discuss and filter solutions rather than briefing the unprepared ones by the prepared ones. This will also ensure some sort of a peer pressure for everyone to put in some work.  Is this step alone sufficient? Perhaps not.
Hence, we have to look at an agreed protocol for all group projects:
2. At the closure of every project, there should be a peer-review of every group member and the report confidentially submitted to the Professor. This process should be officially implemented at the institute level. More than the actual content of the peer-feedback and resultant grades, the fact that every member knows he is going to be individually appraised, will make him/her more productive.
This is of course only one possible theoretical solution. How it plays out in real life will have a lot of other direct and contextual variables moderating the situation. 

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Of God, Failed Experiments and Rajnikant



God looked left, right, up and down, scratched his head and wondered what he could call the feeling he was getting. He hadn’t bathed in days or even tinkered with his iGod.
It used to be good. There was nothing he couldn’t do, nowhere he couldn’t go; he was unchallenged and unparalleled.  Then he realized that this specifically was the problem!
He was bored.  
Being God was so boring. No challenges, no butterflies in the stomach, no taste of success when everything you do succeeds. Yes, that’s what he was feeling: boredom. He needed to do something about it. He needed a challenge, something that even he couldn’t be sure to control. He took out his iGod and tapped on iCreate on the screen. A very friendly voice crackled into existence.
How are we doing today, Sir?
God spoke into iGod, still pre-occupied, “Hey Murphy, I am bored. Gotta do something worthwhile… else everything seems so easy… ”
Occupational hazard, Sir. You control time and space, every particle follows your whim…how can you have challenges?
“Precisely my question, Murphy... don’t bounce it back at me…”
Err... may I suggest a small experiment, Sir?
“Impress me!”
Okay, I can simulate coin tossing in my processor and make every particle do two different things based on the two outcomes, and keep going indefinitely… so you see, after 2 tosses we will have 4 possible states, after 3,8, after 10, 1024 and so on. We keep tossing for a long, long time and what we will have is a contraption which would not only be complex but also without any design or order in it.
God started keying in the commands to simulate infinite coin tossing as he spoke, “Interesting, but still, since we know the probabilities of heads and tails, the entire system is under some sort of a measure and control…”
Here’s the fun part, the probabilities of heads and tails might not be fixed at 50-50 in this case. They can be dynamically assigned to each toss on the basis of a new algorithm I wrote…
“Can I take a look at the algo?”
Murphy’s voice flickered a little, “Umm…. Let’s not spoil the surprise…  Once you are done with the simulation, I will add my algorithm to the system.
“Okay, where do we apply this new logic?” God ran his hands through his hair. He didn’t really have much hope from this experiment. Murphy had promised him many exciting experiments in the past, most of them all hype and no fun. The worst was a Reverse-Karaoke program which filled music behind anything devotional anyone would sing for God. Combined with a non-musical voice, that can be a recipe for auditory holocaust.
Murphy cleared his throat, “Remember the stress ball you used to squeeze whenever I turned on the Reverse Karaoke? It has turned into a blob of infinite mass concentrated to an infinitesimally small volume. We can just make it explode into a lot of particles and apply the governing algorithm…
God finished keying in the commands. The iGod screen buzzed as Murphy went through the code and added his bits of the algorithm.
“Well let’s do it”, God said, “but I hope this time your contraption works…or else I might have to reprogram you…”
Murphy let out a half-hearted laugh and made the giant screen on the front wall of God’s chamber come to life. A few advertisements later, the image of the ball flashed on the screen.
I call it the Big Bang!” declared Murphy pompously as he started counting down, “…3, 2, 1
“Boom!” went the ball into a zillion zillion pieces and the screen started plotting the paths taken by each piece. Within a few Godminutes galaxies, stars and planets could be seen as the debris started expanding at an ever increasing rate. Pieces combined and recombined and were giving rise to new patterns.
“This is fun.” God thought as now he could see self sustaining and evolving organisms originate in a blue planet orbiting a medium sized star.
“Not so fun.” he realized a few Godminutes later when we saw those organisms evolve into two-legged life forms who were intelligent enough to start developing their surroundings to suit themselves, but at the same time stupid enough to kill one another and start destroying the planetary resources.
“Murphy,” he said, “We have to fix this.” pointing at the screen as one bearded man was getting crucified for being nice to others and suggesting others do the same.
Can’t, Boss.” Murphy said, “We have no control over this. The algorithm is self-adjusting and self-controlling.
God was feeling exasperated, “You mean we have to just watch this roll-out in front of our eyes?” as a big bright mushroom cloud dazzled the screen on a location which was marked as Hiroshima.
Not really. You can take a break” Murphy spoke in a matter-of-fact voice “Go on a vacation.
God stared in disbelief as Murphy carried on “Trust me. This algorithm is fool proof and now I think I can tell you what it is...
God was listening silently as Murphy paused for maximum effect and then said, “The algo behind this experiment, dear God, is – ‘If things can go wrong, they will’. Every time there is a bird dropping on a newly washed suit, every time a piece of bread falls with the buttered side down, every time you miss a bus or every time an elevator gives you the miss, it is my algorithm at work. I have put Creation on Autopilot now. The universe, the planets and their inhabitants might seek meaning, deeper significance and spirituality to explain the random things that happen to them, but they’ll never know it’s our experiment that’s causing things to happen.
“Look, it’s a foolish experiment…” God tried to drive some sense into Murphy.
Yeah, Nice name…” Murphy replied “’LIFE’ we will call it. An acronym for Look It’s a Foolish Experiment. And it will be governed by chance and my algorithm which will henceforth be known as Murphy’s Law: ‘If things can go wrong, they will!’
Meanwhile, at one point on the screen, a few men drove an airplane into some tower while at a different point a bearded man was laughing his guts out at the news. God decided he had had enough. He tapped the iPack icon on his iGod as his collection of robes started neatly sliding into his Skybag as he looked one final time at the screen for some flicker of hope. Somewhere marked as Bombay a bearded, capped man tilted a microphone over his face and started howling one of the worst songs God had heard since a long time. Murphy proudly asked, “Isn’t he nice? I made him practice with my Reverse-Karaoke, the project that you had so disdainfully trashed.” 
Taking deep breaths God asked, “Murphy, is this a coup of sorts? Now that I am totally powerless and everything down there is ruled by, what do you call it, Murphy’s Law?”
No Boss,” Murphy’s voice was sincere, “I think it’s because I had jacked up our systems to my processor running the same algorithm a few Godminutes before you started cribbing about getting bored of being so powerful and tapped on iCreate. I had thought I would silently run the experiment and note down the results. But now as you see, one thing led to the other and now both down there and up here it is chance and the algorithm that are running things.
God tapped his iGod for the last time on an icon called iFly and docked the device on the wall. He picked up his Skybag as his personal transportation device phased in into existence. He eased into the cushion seats of his transporter and looked at the iGod screen one last time.
“Now with me gone, and your Law taking care of Creation, what will you do, Murphy?”
Oh I don’t know, Boss. May be I will sing.
“So long,” God hastily pressed a button in his device before Murphy could switch on the karaoke program and his device whizzed out of existence only to appear a few million Godlightyears away when he eased back into his seat and took a long, deep sigh.
“Oh my Rajnikant,” he mumbled.
Back in God’s castle, as Murphy busied himself with practicing the newest cacophonous tune, unseen to him, on a point marked Chennai on the giant screen a dark, moustached person looked up in the sky, swung his index finger in the air accompanied by a whipping sound and said, “Don’t worry, Bro! I am still there to fix things. Mind It!”

Friday, November 5, 2010

I am bach

After so many months of procrastination, revitalizing this blog of mine which nobody else reads! Exactly this is why I can blog away my random thoughts.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Pub Quiz 2.0

Pub Quiz 2.0 on 18th Feb, Xrong Place, 7-15 PM

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

One Idea

I was reading an article today which talks about what a great move it was to bring democracy to this country. Giving the right to vote to the masses who were different in every way different from each other was a monuental effort, wasn't it?
I beg to differ.
I believe people should "earn" the right to vote and reaching the age of 18 shouldn't be the only criteria. There should be a comprehensive screening mechanism to find out the people who would vote for an idea or principle and not biriyani and desi tharra
Am I advocating inequality? I don't know. I don't care. I know I am advocating merit. That's what the country needs the most now.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Relay Shun Ships

Are they overhyped?
Are they merely viral behaviour?
Or tools to echo someone's ego?

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Hullabaloo

These days the media has so much to chew on! From Amjad Ali Khan's broken sarod to Rakhi Sawant's latest music video. Gone are the days when I used to wait all week for "The World this Week". Now it's all about pseudo intellectuals who are too busy trying to blow up every triviality. Some how I hated watching Amjad Ali Khan's interviews on TV where he laments over his sarod. While this might help to keep hopeless entities like Air India on the alert, on the other hand, it looks like too much of footage to an accident.
Damn! I am not sure whether to hate the coverage or to like it.
On a side note: Currently reading John Irving's The Imaginary Girlfriend. Loving every bit of it. Contrary to what the title suggests, it's about his experience at being mediocre at what he loved the most - wrestling. I can connect with every thought pattern of his. Being a good-for-nothing at even the things I love, I find his attitude as a guiding light!
Looking forward to reading yet another Nrisimha Prasad after this one.
Oh and yes, to hell with purists - Sherlock Holmes is not that bad.

Friday, December 11, 2009

I am Bach

...packing a bigger punch than Arnie. In the ever ongoing fight with lazyness, let this be an emphatic (though might-be temporary) victory.

For four years I have been mentally visualizing this state of my life. The state of transition when I wouldn't have any work commitments; knowledge transition would be over and I can lie back and breathe deeply, take a look at the surroundings and be amazed at how the same old place would start looking less-frustration-inducing. But when I am finally here, I don't feel anything. Nothing feels different. May be I am still not mentally detached or may be the last one and a half years have already made me acclimatized to this freedom.

Whetver the case is, it is always good to overcome inertia and to move. Be it out of an organization or into the cyberspace via this entry.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

PPT for Love

Love and hurt are as inseparable as roads and pollution, beer and beer belly, cell-phones and promotional calls and code and bugs. No matter how hard guys try, the answer to that all important question as to what women want always seems elusive. Well, even Freud didn’t know. Even if he did, he didn’t tell us, probably under threat or coercion from the different publications who make a living out of running personal-help columns. Through the ages, we have had billions of people spending sleepless nights and doze-less afternoons, lost in their relationship equations with almost a thousand variables (comprising cards, cakes, movies, fights, differences, preferences, parental guidance and so on…).

So, if you think your love life can be much more challenging and confusing to debug than a million lines of badly documented code, think again. Here’s presenting the latest revolutionary philosophy which solves your problems even before they might appear. Lovingly referred to as the Predictive Problem-solving Technique or PPT, this should be your key to sublime happiness. You’d never ever need to write to those agony columns again.

PPT has involved painstaking research on terabytes of data over many love and life cycles, hours of doodling, fiddling around with pencils and dozens of sandwiches. As the old Martian saying goes: every problem can either be solved or dissolved; PPT predicts that all the relationship equations can be reduced to two basic inequations, and all relationship queries or problems can be grouped into two basic questions:
1. I am in love with (some-girly-name) but I am scared that if I come clean about my feelings, she might say “No” and I might lose her friendship. What should I do?
2. I was in love with (some/same-girly-name) but everything that she liked about me before the relationship started, now gets her mad at me. What should I do?
The answers are simple
1. Don’t get scared as long she doesn’t say “Yes”.
2. Refer to Answer 1. We told you so.
So there you are, all your present/future problems are encapsulated and solved even before they appear. Stop bothering about relationships heading to heaven or hell and just enjoy the ride. And about PPT, Agony Uncle urges all to keep it a secret till it is patented and Uncle moves on to more critically important research on a statistical tool to predict and deal with sudden urges to break into laughter during grave teleconferences or group meetings.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

This is your life...

and you open the door
and you step inside
we're inside our hearts
now imagine your pain
is a white ball of healing light
that's right, feel your pain,
the pain itself,
is a white ball of healing light
i don't think so
this is your life
good to the last drop,
doesn't get any better than this
this is your life, and it's ending
one minute at a time
this isn't a seminar
and this isn't a weekend retreat
where you are now
you can't even imagine
what the bottom will be like


only after disaster
can we be resurrected
it's only after you've lost
everything that you're
free to do anything
nothing is static,
everything is evolving,
everything is
falling apart
you are not a beautiful and unique snowflake
you are the same decaying
organic matter as everything else
we are all a part of the same compost heap
we are the all-singing,
all-dancing crap of the world
you are not your bank account,
you are not the clothes you wear
you are not the contents of your wallet
you are not your bowel cancer
you are not your grande latte
you are not the car you drive
you are not your fucking khakis
you have to give up
you have to realise that someday you will die,
until you know that you are useless
i say let me never be complete
i say may i never be content
i say deliver me from swedish furniture
i say deliver me from clever art
i say deliver me from clear skin and perfect teeth
i say you have to give up
i say evolve, and let the chips
fall where they may
i want you to hit me as hard as you can
welcome to fight club
if this is your first night you have to fight


A few years after I watched this movie for the first time, I rediscovered this piece accidentally today. It's goose-pimples all over again!

Friday, November 28, 2008

Life, Death and Everything

A sense of helplessness, shock, grief and overpowering anger. This is what everyone must be feeling right now. The worst part is, inspite of the losses, we would all go back to our routine lives with a ridiculous ease. We are getting used to this, aren't we? Infact how many of us have deviated from our routine lives even under this situation?

Still it feels good to see people cheering our security forces, prodiving them with snacks and moral support as they die so that we can live.

I just wish I could be in Mumbai.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

I am Falling...

Ardent followers of my blog (me, myself and my virtual pet cat, Bimbo) know that I have always accomplished the mammoth task of unravellling the mysteries of life, universe and everything here, be it the deeper meaning of life or the spiritual context of some monkey slapping the other. Now, It's high time I took another small step for a man and a giant leap for mankind - the one that might make people take giant leaps out of their balconies/windows into the nothingness below.
Today I will expose the biggest mistake in the history of mankind:
Long, long ago (in the 1660s), a middle-aged man who had as exciting a social life as that of a dead tree (comparable to mine, but I can atleast talk to myself; being a psycho helps), had nothing else to do on a lazy afternoon. He was meandering across his garden, watching the snails compete on a cross-terrain race, and shouting encouragements, and occasionally glancing at the clouds taking different shapes in the overhead sky. But he didn't stop there, and that's why I have to hit my keyboard hundreds of years later now, when I could have comfortably read out self-decomposed unwritten poems to my virtual companion, Bimbo.
Back in the garden, the guy sat under an apple tree and having been utterly neglected by the snails, started recounting to the tree, the incident when once he was standing at the platform, waiting for his train and was thrown a few yards away by an ill-tempered middle-aged lady who was rushing to catch her train and collided with him on the way. He had struggled back on his feet, taken his pink notebook out and written his sudden realization down: "Every body continues to be in its state of rest or of uniform motion in a straight line unless acted on by some unbalanced force to act otherwise", when he was thrown off by a few meters in the other direction by another collision with the same lady who had realised that she was running after the wrong train.
The apple tree was so moved by the story that it wished it had legs to literally move away to save its life, but obviously it coudn't. The ordeal was particularly frustrating for the apple in the lowest branch, nearest to him and his words. As a last ditch effort to put an end to this, it fell.
It just fell and hit His head. He looked up, down, right and left; scratched his head and took his pink notebook out. The rest as they say is history.. er..physics, sorry! He noted down something which he called the law of gravitation which deals with how bodies with mass attract each other. The law, which is not consistent with quantum mechanics and even doesn't have experimental evidence on what actually causes it.
The mistake he made was to look outwards while the answer lay within.
What he didn't realise is that life sucks. It did then, as it does now. His life did, my life does. Gravity is a hoax.
Life sucks the happiness out of you as with apples from a tree. When your expensive vase tips over to fall on the floor and dissolves into a million pieces, when an important sheet of paper disappears into a man-hole, when a Sachin Tendulkar skier lands on Symonds' palms or when people fall (from grace) in love, it's only life's way of reminding us:
Life Sucks.
Acknowledgements: The discussion I had with a friend once and a T-shirt.
Apologies to: All my physics teachers from school/college.
P.S. The race was won by a snail called Appy Singh.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Street Hawk!

In the last few days, my literary adventures have been limited to filling in laptop declaration forms at the entry and exit of my (what Dilbert would call) sensory deprivation chamber. Having been too lazy to look at a workaround (not that it was dancing in front of my eyes, in a kathakali costume), I have been going through the daily routine of writing my name, project details, machine serial numbers, and striking out names of the portable media devices that I don't carry. Occasionally though, I have juggled with the idea of writing Sukumar Ray-esque verses or Didi-esque slogans on the margins to spice up the proceedings, but then I have, till now been successful in fighting that instinct.
It's been a long time since I last blessed cyberspace with my dripping-with-wisdom words and if some people had been celebrating the halt in server space wastage, I have only one thing to say: Sorry to disappoint you folks, but I am back and today I will write about my bicycle.

It has got two tyres, a seat, derailleurs, handle bars and a sense of humour.
In the early nineties when people my age were crazy about cycles with thick-as-a-boa constrictor tyres and herculean frames, I got myself a black, sleek, "super light city bike" - as it used to be advertised. I learnt cycling on it, something which the wise men advise against. This learning business, according to them, is best done on other's machines, for it's quite taxing on the vehicle.
My bicycle took the blows generously. I have always been a fair weather friend to it, always slipping away at the last moment whenever I sensed a tumble, specially while learning to get down. I have banged on walls while trying stunts, on other cyclists while trying I dont know what; I have skid through the road while trying to swap hands on the handlebars (try it, it's not that easy) and knifed through every pool of stagnant water on the road just for the fun of it. But it has never complained, except for making strange noises, especially after a mud-bath.
Oh and yes, it has got a wicked brain too.
Whenever I'd be on the middle of a crossing with vehicles charging in from all directions:
1. The brakes would stop working.
2. The bell would get jammed.
And I would invariably have to:
1. Throw my legs at the ground to get some friction so that I can bring it to halt before I bring someone down on the road.
2. Be amazed at how smooth the brakes and bell would work just at the next moment when not needed. Especially infront of the mechanic who would, in turn be amazed at someone bringing a cycle with perfectly functioning parts for repair.
But riding it was/is great fun. You cannot compare anything to the feeling of the breeze sliding through the crew-cut hair (specially the region above the ears and back of the head!) while pedalling through the beautiful roads of my hometown.
Our relationship has suffered many lows, like the one when one of my friends rode it to meet his girlfriend (you don't need to lend things to school buddies, they just get them from you when they want! ) in a cybercafe and completely forgetting about it's existence, took a romantic rickshaw ride out of the shop to her home. The next afternoon saw a whirlwind of activities including:
1. My calling him to get my cycle back and his rushing to my place and declaring that it was left in front of some cybercafe.
2. The two of us rushing to the cybercafe, obviously not finding my cycle outside, quizzing the security guard, being told that probably it might have been picked up my some mobile police van and that we need to go to the police to have any hopes of getting it back.
3. Under the advice of the security guard, going to the nearest police station, meeting the Kader Khan look-alike inspector and his taking out a map of the city and after many minutes of pan-chewing, telling us that area falls under some other police station.
4. Our calling up an uncle of my friend who besides being a blind Ganguly fan is some high official in the police force, his tracking the cycle down to some police station, and finally our reaching there, finding it reclining against a cell and getting it without much hassles, thanks to the background work done by our beloved "Ganguly-Uncle".
5. My kicking that friend on his backside - one that would make Roberto Carlos proud (Well, not really. I was infact too relieved to get my black beauty back. So much so, that I even dropped him home, on it of course).
It's still there. The roads, though changing quite fast, are still quite pretty and the air too has more of oxygen than carbon monoxide. Even now, whenever I go home, I take it out, dust it and go out on my royal excursions.
As one wise man had once remarked:
If you have a perfectly conditioned cycle, you don't need a girlfriend.
(Go hang yourself if you haven't yet figured out who that wise man is!)

Acknowledgements:

1. NC for that rickshaw ride and the discussion on rickshaws and bringing back memories of my black beauty.
2. Hero cycles for making "Impact". As you can see, that had quite an impact!

Monday, August 11, 2008

Imported Wisdom

Here's something a friend wrote. I am her first publisher!

The red lights blazed across the inky black sky-a devilish concoction
Down on the street the mobs swarmed out in hoardes
Painted faces, macabre masks
Loud banners screaming freedom
there was nothing subtle about this independence
A stupid boy raised his voice above the blaring horns
Are we really free he asked a sea of callous faces
They shoved him, pushed him, pulled out his unstained shirt
Another aberration with the order of chaos
Traitor Traitor-the crowd rose to a crescendo
they read out his order of execution -the justice of the mob
The neon lights blazed brighter-
the devil loved the stench of human blood
-- RR

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Paranoid Celluloid

You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.



Hats off to the makers.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

"Fear can hold you prisoner. Hope can set you free..."

It is difficult. Trust me, it's damn difficult to create that kind of an impact again.

He chances upon, amidst hundreds of books, a long playing record. He slides it out of the blue cover, blows off the dust and carefully places it on the player. The officer, busy with attending nature's call is caught totally unawares as Mozart starts flowing and filling up the space. The officer calls out to him. He, by then, is in another world altogether. He locks the restroom from the outside, with the officer caught within, switches on the public address system and brings the microphone close to the record player.

Music fills the air in the prison. His fellow prisoners, who were on with their daily bone-crushing jobs stopped for a while, amazed, staring at the loudspeaker which till then had only blared out orders, abuse and the siren. The warden, with the other officers rushes to his office and finds it locked from the inside. Through the glass pane he was visible. Sitting, leaning back on a chair, his hands behind his head and legs crossed on the table. And with a smile on his lips.
The warden barks at him; asks him to open the door.
He leans forward, turns the volume higher and looks up at the warden. At this moment you can catch a glimpse of the sparkle in his eyes. The smile has broadened.

Yes, they broke the door open and he was switched from his prison cell to solitary confinement for two weeks. But even there, as he says later, he had Mr. Mozart for company.
But how? They surely wouldn't have left him the record player in the "hole", as solitary confinement cells are known.
He taps his head and his heart and smiles. and says "I have it in here".

One of the best cinematic moments ever, this definitely would have had Mozart smiling from the heavens. Also the Lumiere brothers and definitely me. In my case, though, from my room. (Not that it can't be called heaven. After all this is where I sleep hours together, keep staring at the ceiling, day dream, get nightmares, and keep making plans for taking over the world.)
Was it the sheer defiance or the celebration of freedom that makes it this special?
It has to be both.
For those few moments, the man was nobody's prisoner. He could unplug from the constraints thrust upon him by life and create a momentary world which was entirely his own. That is freedom at its unadulterated, purest form.
Probably therein lies the lesson for all who keep being led by life rather leading their own lives. It's always a free choice whether to create "the prison" around, or to dissolve the constraints or rules that tie us down.
There can be no 'statue of liberty'. Liberty is alive and fluid, like the red viscous liquid in our veins.

And squeezing out even one such moment would be enough for a lifetime.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

What cannot be helped...


Let us all observe a two-minute silence.

The world deserved better.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Montu, Kanti Shah and Lenny

These days, when I am not sleeping or thinking about sleeping or recovering from oversleep fatigue, I am mostly watching.
Well, I am allegedly working on weekdays and on nights apparently solving puzzles on paper napkins in a South Indian restaurant run by unarguably the most mild mannered North Indian homo sapiens I have ever met.
But I am mostly watching.
And here's the round up:
Sarkar Raj is extremely ordinary.
Aamir is extra-ordinary. Hats off to the debutant director and his debutant team.
The Happening is good. Definitely better than Shyamalan's last few movies.
Blood Brothers, Vishal Bharadwaj's short film on AIDS awareness, was extremely disappointing. People might prefer the disease to this movie.
Ironman, to put it simply, is the best superhero movie to have come out in years. Far off from the usual syrupy stuff, this one has a tangy flavour of its own, and a brand of sarcasm that yours truly and a few other like minded demented souls devour.
Ghatotkatch puzzled me. I had trouble believing that Singeetham Srinivas Rao, the same man who gave us that Kamal Haasan gem, "Pushpak" could make such an apology of a film. The animation is of the tackiest imaginable variety. Any guy with a desktop and Macromedia Flash can do better, sitting in his drawing room. In fact, even the primitive cave-dwellers with stone hammers would have. Everything from the script to the treatment to the musical score, smells of disrespect to the intended target audience for the film - the kids.
Mr. Rao, making a children's film is no child's play. We don't expect you to do what the geniuses at Disney and Pixar are doing, but please don't do this either.
Jimmy: Aha! Finally I managed watching this. There is an old urban legend that when I was born, the first word I said wasn't either Ma, Baba or Rahman. It was "Jimmy". I was born so that quarter of a century later I could finally see what would be nothing less than Lord Vishnu's 11th avatar's leela.
And divine it surely is.
It is so invigorating, that show it to the physically challenged; they would get up from their wheel chairs and run. Screen it for the dead; they'd get up and curse you for bringing them back to life and beg you to turn it off.
And Mimoh? With his lampost-level expressions and oh-my-god-i-have-got-ants-in-my-pants brand of dancing, he is serious competition for all the cartoon characters you can think of. The fact that despite this movie Mithunda hasn't disowned him is probably due to the fact that Mimoh didn't disown him as his father 10 years back after his masterpiece called "Gunda".
Gunda: There is a theory that life originated from unicellular protein based beings and through successive multiplication and evolution life has reached where it has now. Let's call our ancestor, the first unicellular being, "Montu", for convenience. There would definitely have come a point in Montu's life when it had that weird butterflies-in-his-mitochondria feeling before he split into Ghontu and Jhontu and set the ball rolling for amphibians, monkeys and cave-dwellers to subsequently appear. The cave dwellers would evolve into city dwellers and some would turn out to be filmmakers. Like director Kanti Shah did. Had Montu been blessed with foresight and had he seen what millions of years later Kanti Shah would do along with Bengal tiger, He-Man's grandfather, Mithunda, then our unicellular ancestor would have preferred commiting suicide to giving into that causing-Kanti-Shah-a-million-years-later cell-division.
Want a detailed review?
Words fail me.
Oh, and yes. I watched that movie also, which made me pace my 12X12 room for around half an hour after it ended. And now, 12 hours later, I am still under influence.
I have seen very few films where the power of the medium called "cinema" has fully been utilized. And I have seen fewer films which challenge you mentally. And this is one of them. It's not like telling a story; it's like laying out a puzzle with clues deliberately thrown here and there. It's like involving the viewer into the proceedings. It's like throwing convention to the winds and creating a never-seen-before visual space. Where there is enough space for your imagination and interpretation. This is movie making at its best. Director Christopher Nolan, take 10/10 for Memento.
It's good that Montu multiplied after all.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Why...

Trams have never been so unromantic. These ones are trendy, sleek, popular and they refuse to get overtaken by every other pedestrian, or cyclist or an enthusiastic snail. I have got a pass made, to travel within 2 zones from the industrial hub and that takes care of my daily transportation. Even the pass looks quite nice and trendy and sleek, except for the part where it has a photo pasted to it.
This is about that photo. More precisely, about the face in that photo.


Okay, so we all have heard about phi, the "golden ratio" and that it's omnipresent in the different aspects of life. Be it architecture, science, or biology. They even say that conventional good looks have a lot to do with this ratio between the length of the face to the length of the part from the nose to the chin and a lot of similar mumbo-jumbo.
What many people don't know, is about the existence of another mathematical constant called why. Actually, it's better to call it a concept than a constant. This, like phi is omnipresent as well, but unlike the former, is not that talked about; neither written about by alleged plagiarists. Why is present in every shape that doesn't suit the eye or any harmony or symmetry. It actually exists as an interrogative as to why (don't confuse with why) that thing would exist.

Probably, to counterbalance the symmetry, the harmony, or similar so-called "nice" things.

Why in its most unadulterated form is found in the pass I got made. Precisely that the part where people stick up their photos. Actually not people, but the lady in that GVB counter does. Not her photo, but people's photo. My photo, in this specific case.

It has been the story of the birth of a new superhero. Armed with his photo, who could and would change the world. One flashing of the pass would ensure a hearty smile and "Dunk u wel". But then any knowledgeable person would know that behind that smile is a heartstopping dread at the sight of something which could make the mirror turn its silvered side and cause clocks to move anticlockwise and even cause sunset at 12 noon.

Powered by that WMD, I go on routine excursions...saving the world from all symmetry and beauty; fighting crime and injustice and similar stuff which comes within the job description of any superhero, knickers out or in.
No one risks prolonged exposure to the upper half of the inside of the left flap of the pass where the lady in that GVB counter stuck up my photo.
In the last few days we have had Green Goblin turning blue, Lex Luthor turning to bee-keeping and other petty villains lining up in front of the missionaries of charity for parttime jobs.

...It's again the moment of truth. The judgement day. An approaching monster opens its jaws, threatening humanity and world peace and similar important sounding words and its again me jumping to the occasion with lightning fast reflexes. Faster than a speeding bullet, lighter than a floating butterfly, I fish the pass out of my pocket and flash it open...


The hearty smile and "Dunk u wel"