Two movies.Two women...
I stayed up late at night watching the Golden Globe Awards - more  relevant, powerful and glamourous than  even the mighty Oscar's. Now...  that's what we call Red Carpet dressing! I don't care what the fashion  police say about Halle Berry's outfit looking like a modified negligee.  She is a stunner all the way... and remains one even if she chooses sack  cloth.  Neither Portman's acceptance speech nor the out-of-place red  rose on her  yummy-mummy gown did it for me - and I adore Natalie .  Jolie looked suitably sulky and sultry, but sorry, her green sheeted  number did her no justice at all. Oh... am I glad that smug creepo  Johnny Depp didn't get an award after two nominations in the Best Actor  category???
In India, the film awards season has begun - no surprises  here, whatsoever. Full 'setting' evident.  All the Awards' ceremonies   look the same, so  do the awardees. As for the comical dress code for  Red Carpet photo-ops, come on you  Bollywood beauties - most of you are  hotter and better looking than your Hollywood counterparts. Get it  right!!!
 
This appeared today in Bombay Times...
 Two movies. Two women.
Okay,  this is going to sound insane : I watched two movies virtually  back-to-back and came away thinking they weren’t all that different  after all. The first was Ananth Mahadevan’s tour de force , ‘ Mee  Sindhutai Sapkal’, and the other – don’t laugh –  Alankrita  Shrivastava’s  ‘Turning 30’. It’s not just the fact that both films are  strongly, unambiguously and powerfully woman-centric. It is what they  are saying about their protagonists – one, a living legend who runs  orphanages for abandoned children at Hadapsar, the other a fictional  character named Naina, whose only ‘cause’ is herself! But the manner in  which the respective film makers have portrayed their heroines, sans  false sentimentality, speaks a lot about the directors and their choice  of subjects. Sindhutai’s story is brutal, almost unbelievable, but like  Mahadevan said during an interaction with viewers at the private  screening, “ Her life is indeed like a film script – so exaggerated, it  demanded to be  made.” This remarkable lady’s survival itself is nothing  short of a miracle.After being thrown out of her husband’s home (  various complicated reasons) with a newborn infant to look after, she  managed to stay alive – just about – till one fine day she discovered  the inner tigress in her, and took on a corrupt system which had cheated  and oppressed the abjectly poor Adivasi (her tribe) wood cutters for  years. After that turning point, there is no looking back for the  ‘reborn’ Sindhutai ( she rechristens herself after the name of her  favourite river). The first half of the film is relentlessly grim ,  particularly the scene in which Sindhutai gives birth to her baby girl  in a cow shed. Her humiliation at the hands of everyone, including her  own mother, as she struggles to vindicate herself, are so moving, one  wonders at the steel within that kept her going, till she finally  emerged as a larger than life personality who continues to protect  unwanted kids and is adored and admired by thousands . Today Sindhutai  is a hot ticket on the international speaker’s circuit ( she charges a  fat fee and jokes she only gives ‘Bhashan for ration’), loved and lauded  by people who have made her into a big enough folk hero for someone to  alert Oprhah Winfrey about her.
 Gul Panang’s Naina is a pretty  wounded creature too… she is told by friends that the only way to get  over a man is to find another one, cut her hair , wear a red dress and  stilletoes. Easy! Nobody understands her emotional turmoil and sense of  rejection, not even her mother. ‘Turning 30’ is a brave film that  attempts to capture the anxiety of an entire generation of very insecure  urban women whose sole objective in life is to bag a husband.  Frightening but true. Their worst fears have to do with being left on  the shelf as ‘rejects’ – in one really funny scene a knowing masseuse  offers Naina  a ‘pussy pamperer’. While Naina’s self- obsessive angst  and those annoying rants against a steady boyfriend who abruptly dumps  her on the eve of her 30th birthday cannot possibly be compared to  Sindhutai’s torture at the hands of her nasty husband, the initial low  self esteem issues are the same, as are the feelings of being unwanted.  Both the women discover their own strengths through unfair and adverse  circumstances and are seen as victors in the end. ‘Turning 30’ loses its  way somewhere by bringing in unconnected tracks ( a lesbian love affair  that sours), but boldly ventures into fresh terrain ( male strippers at  a bridal shower, women ‘using’ men as sex toys, an obsession with  risqué lingerie). The ladies smoke, drink, cuss and fornicate with  delicious abandon –  all of it guilt-free. And yes, Gul Panag is a great  kisser.Now, if only the director had left out those gauche, painful  monologues! A thumbs up to both films from me!
 
All  I know about colonial furniture is thanks to the hours I used to spend  with a kind and wonderful man called Mahendra Doshi , who passed away  last year. But…. it was as if he was right there, supervising every tiny  detail at the magnificently mounted ‘Tribute’ which is on display at  the Museum. It was like walking into his tasteful living room and  expecting to find Mahendrabhai on a stuffed sofa ,talking languorously  about the champak blooming in the garden outside his Walkeshwar terrace.  If you haven’t  caught the exhibition so far… I urge you to do so.  Lovingly restored and beautifully arranged, it is the best compliment to  Mahendrabhai’s aesthetics and passion.
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