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Mahesh Hegade's Blog
Saturday, 16 April 2005
West is West
Topic: Movies
Average movie....guy comes to US....his struggles....a gori to rescue....what else...

If you want to see 'actor' Gowitrikar who has now made a name as a director....watch this...so so......

Description from Netflix is as below:

West Is West (1989)

Indian immigrant Vikram's (Ashotosh Gowariker) excitement about his trip to California is cut short when U.S. customs officials approve a stay of just one month, instead of the six he planned. He's further dejected when the address where he was to live turns out to be an empty building and his request to study at a university is denied. But things begin to look up when he meets rocker chick Sue (Heidi Carpenter), who instantly steals his heart.
Starring: Ashutosh Gowariker, Heidi Carpenter, More
Director: David Rathod

Posted by Mahesh at 9:59 AM EDT
Zehar......the poison
Topic: Movies
Zehere the poison - Mukesh Bhatt movie....starring IRfan Hasmi, Shamita shetty etc.....

Based on English movie....where a cop gets entagles in a murder....his wife who is also a cop investigates....I think Denzel Washington starrer English version was much much better....Udita Goswami sheds enough clothes.....good for front benchers.....

2 stars......

Posted by Mahesh at 9:56 AM EDT
Long lost friend....
I am so happy to find a long lost friend. When I was in Tanzania from Oct 95 - Oct 96, Suhas Sawant was also an other expat working for the same company that I worked for. He and I became really good friends. Till Sawant's family joined him, he too was a bachelor and gave us good company. We had a lot of fun. Sawant was kind a of friend, philosopher and guide to all of us a bunch of bachelor which included expats like me and many local gujju bhais who have made East Africa their home for several decades. It was the time of my life. Laid back life style, good mix of Indian and African cultures, sense of total out of the world (literally), beautiful beaches of Indian Ocean, nightlong club hopping over the week end, sleeping all Saturday etc. Maaan....what a life it was......it was little too soon to settle down there, so I moved out and came to USA to pursue my career but if I ever want to retire Africa will be the place to retire. Tanzania may not be the best but I would like to check out some islands such as Mauritius/Seychelles.....

Btw, Sawant has been lucky to be able to continue working in Africa. After working in Tanzania for 5 years till 2000, now he is in Nigeria. Good for him. He founds me thru my website and sent me an e-mail....how happy that made me.....looking forward to speaking to Sawanti.......that's how kallus in Tanzania used to make his last name and we used to tease him Mr.Sawanti........

Cheers!

Posted by Mahesh at 9:54 AM EDT
Wednesday, 13 April 2005
Zakhm....injury
Topic: Movies
Zakhm.....movie directed by Mahesh Bhatt....age old hindu muslim clash with masala added....nothing much abt this movie....

2 stars

Posted by Mahesh at 8:47 PM EDT
Hotel Rwanda
Topic: Movies
Hotel Rwanda - what a great movie.....I have been waiting for its release on DVD and could not wait to watch.....

Movie is about the infamous genocide of close to 800,000 million people in a tiny country Rwanda in Africa. Rwanda is also famous for last surviving destination for mountain gorillas.

A former Belgian and other Euro colony has always been plagued by civil unrest. in 1994, it hit the new high with Hutus and Tutsi, two major tribes with hatred for each other. What followed is a genocide of unimaginable scale. What makes it more macbre is the cruelty with which it was carried out.

Hotel Rwanda is a story of a hotel manager in the capital Kigali who is the epitome of humanity and saves several hundred people by sheltering them in his hotel. His ingenuity, presence of mind and putting his limited resources to best possible use for the good humanity became legendary and are well captured in the movie.

This is one movie that will reinfoce that "he is blessed who lives for the rest".......

Superb screen play, excellent cast, and great acting....

Cheers!

Posted by Mahesh at 8:46 PM EDT
Sunday, 10 April 2005
Chocolat
Topic: Movies
One of the nicest movies abt West Africa from colonial era. French with Eng sub title.....very well directed....

description from Netflix

======
Chocolat (1988)

Based on director Claire Denis's childhood memories, Chocolat examines the devastating effect of French colonialism through the eyes of a young girl coming of age in 1950s West Africa. When a plane makes an emergency landing in the isolated colonial post where 8-year-old France (Cecile Ducasse) lives, a diverse group of whites and Africans is stranded and must stay with France's family, forcing sexual, social and class tensions to arise.
Starring: Emmanuelle Chaulet, Francois Cluzet, More
Director: Claire Denis

Posted by Mahesh at 6:43 PM EDT
City Hall
Topic: Movies
City Hall - starring Al Paccino etc. What a nice movie?
Centered around political maneavoring in NY City. Plot is lil convoluted but direction is very good.

3 stars!

Posted by Mahesh at 4:40 PM EDT
Patriot v/s terrorist
Patriot - I am willing to DIE for my country
Terrorist - I am willing to KILL for my country

Posted by Mahesh at 12:45 AM EDT
Ash look-alike
Appears like Ash look-alike Sneha Ullal is making waves in the Bollywood...

For more coverage....visit....http://specials.rediff.com/movies/2005/apr/07sneha1.htm

Posted by Mahesh at 12:34 AM EDT
Saturday, 9 April 2005
Happy Ugadi
Greetings on Indian New Year....Ugadi....

Important tradition of Ugadi is to symbolically consume jaggery(sweet) and bitter neem(bitter)....to reinforce that life is a good mix of happiness and sadness....there is always a day break however long the night may be.....

Cheers !!! and wishing everyone a very happy new year !

Posted by Mahesh at 11:09 PM EDT
Black, Bewafa
Topic: Movies
Black - Big B and Rani Mukherjee starrer. Relationship between a blind girl and her teacher....good screen play but gets boring at times.....

Bewafa - Anil Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor, Akshay Kumar etc...routine family melodrama....Elder sister dies while giving birth to twins...younger sister marries brother in law....old flame....and what not....so so....

Posted by Mahesh at 10:51 PM EDT
Zurm
Topic: Movies
Zurm - Hindi movie starring Bobby Deol, Lara Dutta (I think), Milind Soman....

Good movie...good direction and good acting especially by Deol and Soman. I think this is probably Soman's best movie. He comes to age as a good actor in his anit-hero/villain role.

Good conspiracy when Soman and Lara pull a fast one on him and leave him for dead. This was their plan all along to swindle him of his property. Deol survives miraculously and pays them back with the same coin.

3 stars.....

Posted by Mahesh at 11:03 AM EDT
Karam
Topic: Movies
Karam - starring John Abrahm, PRiyanka Chopra etc.

Hmmmm.....average movie. Decent music. Nothin new. Action keeps the movie going......

2 stars......

Posted by Mahesh at 10:58 AM EDT
Wednesday, 6 April 2005
CBI grills Manikchand
Topic: Underworld
Manikchand Guthka owner Rasiklal Manikchand Dhariwal grilled by CBI regarding his alleged links with mob boss Dawood Ibrahim.

No wonder, his guthka goes by new name RMD. But, the reason for that is different as some other company called 'Malikchnad' went to court after the brand 'Manikchand' got so much bad rap after mafia connection etc. The company claims that people confused 'Malikchand' with 'Manikchand' and their brand suffered. Somehow court asked 'Manikchand' to change..

Strange...

Posted by Mahesh at 9:32 PM EDT
Saturday, 2 April 2005
Andaz Apna Apna
Topic: Movies
Good comedy movie....3 stars

=====
Andaz Apna Apna (1994)
Suggest to a friend
Two young men -- Prem (Salman Khan) and Amar (Aamir Khan) -- are broke and have no real plans for the future when they discover that a stunning heiress (Raveena Tandon) lives nearby. Both Prem and Amar make it their mission to charm the young lady into marriage -- but they're not the only ones vying for her wealth. Rajkumar Santoshi directed this lighthearted blend of comedy, romance, and action.
Starring: Aamir Khan, Salman Khan, More
Director: Raj Kumar Santoshi

Posted by Mahesh at 11:20 PM EST
Nagma ki band bajegi?
Topic: Underworld
CBI to quiz Nagma over alleged underworld links
17.15 IST 02nd Apr 2005

By Agencies

The CBI will question Bollywood actress Nagma in connection with her alleged nexus with the underworld, even as the agency claimed that it had evidence of involvement of Dawood Ibrahim in the Gutkha case allegedly involving gutkha baron Rasiklal Manikchand Dhariwal.

"The name of Nagma figured in the confessional statement of one of the accused arrested by Mumbai police in smuggling of gutkha machines to Pakistan. This is for her benefit only that she should come out clean and cooperate with the CBI," CBI Director U.S. Misra told reporters in New Delhi today.

He said all the people named by Jumbo, the accused arrested by Mumbai police, will be questioned by the CBI.

Referring to the ongoing investigation in the gutkha case, the CBI Director claimed that Dhariwal, Goa gutkha owner J.M. Joshi, underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and his brother Anees Ibrahim "were in touch with each other".

"We are probing all angles in this case," Misra said.

Posted by Mahesh at 2:20 PM EST
Dil Kya Kare
Topic: Movies
Dil Kya Kare -1999- starring Aj Devgan, Kajol, Mahima Choudhary.

Somehow I had missed this movie. But, glad to watch it.

Nice one. Family melodrama. Real mother, adopted mother and their common love for the kid....yoou get the story..it is not all abt the story but abt good acting by all and direction. Kajol as the birth mother is simply too good with emotional acting. Aj is good too.

Cheers! 3 stars

Posted by Mahesh at 10:04 AM EST
Party
Topic: Movies
Party - 1984 art movie starring Om Puri etc.

Simple, off beat movie with several color ful characters coming off the masks in a party.

Dialogs are effective and thought provoking.

3 stars

Posted by Mahesh at 10:01 AM EST
Thursday, 31 March 2005
Police stuff
A matter of degree, third degree
But even public support, even ‘social sanction’, does not justify blinding and torture. Even of prisoners
DILIP D’SOUZA
Send Feedback E-mail this story Print this story
Posted online: Thursday, March 24, 2005 at 0000 hours IST

It must be a sign of something — a snail-paced judiciary, a profound lack of faith in our justice system, something. When a police officer is arrested because he is suspected of murdering a suspect in a bomb-blast case, people turn out in their hundreds to protest. They say, how can you arrest this honest officer for doing his duty? They say, if you do this, which officer will ever take the risk of going after hardcore — always hardcore — terrorists and gangsters? They say, fine, he killed the man, but the man was a terrorist and he deserved to die. Some other officers say, as if this must certainly clinch the issue, the public is with us.

But here’s something to think about: the dead man was a suspect, that’s all. Setting off a bomb is a horrifying crime all right, but a man arrested on suspicion of being involved in a horrifying crime, even great suspicion, remains a suspect, that’s all. Until he is tried and convicted, however slow and tortuous that process might be, that’s all he is. The tortuous ways of the judiciary, however frustrating we find them, do not mutate him from suspect to terrorist.

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All of which, after all, applies just as much to the officer himself. For until his own trial and conviction, he remains no more than a suspect as well.

Folks familiar with recent happenings in Bombay will know that this is about the senior police inspector Praful Bhosale. Bhosale was arrested and accused of the torture and death in custody of a man named Khwaja Yunus. Who was Yunus? He was charged with the Ghatkopar bomb-blasts of December 2002. While in police custody, he died; the police claimed that happened as he tried to escape.

But here’s something more to think about: what happens to suspects in the custody of the Indian police is widely known and very simple. They are beaten to extract information. The police themselves hardly treat this as a secret. In this very case, one of Bhosale’s police supporters asked the press “sarcastically” whether it was likely that a suspect would offer information if he was plied with biryani and sweets. Implication: of course he was beaten. That’s what we have to do.

Not that it is left to implication, either. A few years ago, a sub-inspector in rural Maharashtra told me of two men he had arrested as suspects in a few burglaries in the area. With an airy wave of his hand, he said that all he had to do was use some “degree vagairah” — his breathtakingly casual reference to “third degree” — on them. When he did that, they confessed.

No, they didn’t die, they merely confessed. But others — plenty of others — have indeed died after such “vagairah” treatment.

There are many valid reasons for this cavalier attitude towards torture, starting with the way our justice mechanism works. (After all, that’s something the police themselves are intimately familiar with). None of them justify torture. Yet the police will themselves also tell you that perfectly ordinary people pressure them to use that “degree vagairah” on people suspected of a crime. It’s true, the public is with them.

Over two decades ago, policemen in Bhagalpur in Bihar poked bicycle spokes into the eyes of ten undertrial prisoners, then poured acid into those destroyed sockets. If it’s hard to read that, it was just as hard for me to write it. Repugnant it might be, but the public of Bhagalpur, fed up with crime and slow justice, was “with” the police. In their hundreds, they too turned out to show support for the poking and pouring policemen of their town. They asked the same rhetorical questions that Bhosale’s supporters ask today. Bihar’s then-CM, Jagannath Mishra, refused to take action against the cops. What they had done, he claimed, had “social sanction.” To this day, none of them have been punished.

But even public support, even “social sanction”, does not justify blinding and torture. Even of prisoners.

So, in the end, the answers to the questions that Bhosale’s supporters raise are simple. Though they really have nothing to do with either Bhosale or Yunus.

Policemen who torture suspects are in no sense “doing their duty”. Yet plenty of officers do indeed take the risk of standing up to terrorists and gangsters — they see that, rather than the torture of suspects, as their duty — and will continue to do so. The dead man Yunus did not deserve to die, any more than you or Bhosale or I deserve to die, any more than Bhagalpur undertrials deserved to have bike spokes thrust into their eyes.

And if “the public is with us” means that the public approves of torturing crime suspects, sometimes blinding them, sometimes killing them — if this is really what it means, one thing seems clear to me. There is no way we can ever stop terrorism. It too is, and will remain, with us.


Posted by Mahesh at 10:21 PM EST
Wednesday, 30 March 2005
ASD
ASD - Affective Seasonal Disorder.....lack of sun light and prolonged winters depress you....then the medical science terms you may have what is called ASD....with this winter in New England...I won't doubt that but spring is here....smell the flowers!

Cheers!

Posted by Mahesh at 9:38 PM EST

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