Saturday, December 17, 2011

Mission Impossible 4—The Ghost Protocol

MI4 has been solely made for you to see it---and not think about it. You simply do not have time to think.Amazing action schedules, bomb blasts (even of the Kremlin!!), car chases, personal chases, computer wizardry, natural disasters--all have been blended into a thrill-a millisecond smorgasbord.The motto was clear—leave the audience stupefied. The result is a film which you HAVE to see, but which you will forget in a week.

The storyline is simple. A rogue scientist is aiming to lay his hands on a nuclear code which will control Russian nuclear missiles in secret undersea locations and direct it towards U.S. cities in retaliation for an explosion which blows up the Kremlin. The secret group, IMF led by Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) must stop them. Framed by the scientist, the IMG is held responsible for the Kremlin blast and subjected to the Ghost Protocol whereby the Government discards the IMG and will not offer it it’s facilities.

The scenario starts off with a prison outbreak, and moves on to Prague, Moscow, Dubai,and then to Mumbai!!! The landmarks are well established and the breathtaking Spidermanish clinging on to the glass panes of the highest building in the world and then rockfacing it in a memorable sequence leave you gasping.

Emotions have very little place in these sort of films—but the mere exchange of looks by Ethan and his wife Mary leaves a lasting poignancy to the last scene.

The wisecracking, guntoting members are in the same style as before—but some of the breathless suspense filled moments are absent. It is more action than ever.Tom Cruise retains his athleticism but his looks are being affected by age. He looks old in this film and  his stint as Ethan Hunt is nearing it’s end.

One of the key features is the use of the IMAX cameras which actually shows the glass warping under the pressure of Tom Cruise’s hands. The credits come in on an amazing sequence of a lighted strung out fuse-wire.The other high point is Tom Cruise’s incredible antics suspended on the walls of the Burj Khalifa—the highest building in the world without using a stunt double.

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Anil Kapoor had a brief role of little consequence but was surprisingly presented as a Romeo with little character—the typical Hollywood tragic view of Indian superstars….

The popcorn was finished in minutes,  so were the momos and French Fries.My usual practice of taking a snooze had to be abandoned as closing of eyelids could mean a missing of the action!!!

A film to see—and  marvel at from a distance. Not one for emotional bonding or nearness….

Sunday, September 25, 2011

ROYAL MEJAJ

So much has been written about the Nawab of Pataudi after his death that it seemed pointless to write more about him. Yet, the few memories I have of him, most of them in my impressionable teenage years , kept resurfacing .The memories of a lithe fair(with a reddish glow) personality gliding in (not walking) to the crease, cap rakishly angled to one side, bat held casually as if it was an instrument of grace rather than force, were too compelling to keep it bottled up.

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I have seen all my cricket matches only at the Eden Gardens in erstwhile Calcutta. Those days it was an open stadium with shamianas and tarpaulin strung above certain stands. The matches were played from one year to the next, starting on the 29th December and ending after the New Year, with a now extinct Rest day thrown in..In the morning, it was invariably misty, with many cricketers in their pullovers. There would be a breeze flowing in, from the High Court end from the river Hooghly which was just a stone’s throw away. The wooden stands would be a little wet from the morning dew and would creak every time you changed positions. Water was available from taps and the bottled mineral water bottles had not even been thought off. Ladies would actually knit during the day and the comments were piercing and entertaining.There was a  distinctive smell in the ground found nowhere else in the world, of cigarette smoke and chanachur and Jhal-Muri and anticipation and excitement. Like many things of childhood, that smell has also disappeared. The incisive comments have been replaced by mobile phone conversations.

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It was in this situation that I saw him first in 1969 in the match against Bill Lawry’s Australian side. Graham Mckenzie destroyed the Indian top order on a typical Eden morning swinging the outswinger late enough to touch the outside edge of the bat of the opening batsman Ashok Mankad.  One drop Ajit Wadekar  also snicked one to the Australian slip cordon.  Gundappa Vishwanath endeared himself to the Calcutta crowd forever with two classical fleetfooted cover drives off Mckenzie. Then Farook Engineer nicked Mckenzie to the slips to leave India 22 for 3.There was a sudden hush in the crowd . The Nawab is coming—the whispers became stronger and sure enough came Tiger Pataudi.

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The word “Mejaj” in Bengali has no equivalent in any language.Call it charisma , stature , presence but you will never convey the appearance of an Indian batsman who looked more English than the Englishmen, only infinitely more handsome, by any other word than the Royal Mejaj. There was an impatient tug at the pads, and then a stylish flick for a couple. Vishwanath and Pataudi added 42 for the 4th wicket before the gangling Ashley Mallett induced Pataudi to play for a turn that was not there and Ian Chappell clutched on to the catch. The Nawab departed to a collective sigh from  the disapponted crowd, walking well before the umpire’s decision.”Should have stayed a little longer”, muttered my grizzled face neighbour.”He has to make it up next innings”. The Nawab walked off, head a little bowed, perhaps a little shy that he had failed before his in-laws(He had of course married Calcutta girl Sharmila Tagore).

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When Australia came into bat, all eyes were on him as he led the Indian team on to the ground. He walked a few paces ahead of his men, and his directions were simple and authentic. The Indian opening attack  consisted of Subroto Guha ,the Bengal swing bowler playing probably his second or third test, and the athletic but strictly medium paced left handed Eknath Solkar. Bill Lawry and Keith Stackpole were a cut above them , but we could never forget the magical bowling of Bishen Bedi as he looped, spun, outthought and outfoxed batsman after batsman to finish with 7/98. Throughout it all, Pataudi maintained close catching fielders in Solkar and Wadekar, never discouraging his bowlers to flight. And in the covers he prowled like a Tiger, swooping down on his prey (the cricket ball) with precision and surety. His returns were hard and thumping well into Engineer’s gloves and when he chased, he did it with style and elan.

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Australia garnered a lead of 120-odd runs. The Indian reply was a disaster. The hero of the first innings, Vishwanath departed for 5, and when Pataudi joined Wadekar,the score was 90 for 4. Connolly and Freeman were swinging and cutting the ball prodigiously, so we waited with bated breaths for a Royal innings. Lawry brought on Ashley Mallett and with a sense of relief, the Nawab tried to sweep him but missed. He surveyed the field once again. Mallett tossed it up again on middle-leg and the Nawab in a classical English response(he after all had played most of his cricket there) swept him high and handsome straight to Alan Connolly at deep mid wicket. He had made 1 and India were half the side down staring at an innings defeat. There was a collective growl from the crowd. Irresponsible, foolish, casual were some of the nicer epithets showered on him. My grizzled neighbour just scratched his head ad said, “He backed himself to clear the field.That’s the way he has played all along—his way, his mejaji way”.

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Perhaps he lived his life that way too—on his own terms, on his own thinking.

The second time when I saw him was in his twilight years. In 1974, Clive Lloyd led the West Indians to huge wins in the first two Tests of the 5 Test series in India. When they came to Calcutta, we had braced ourselves to another loss. India batted first and again were in trouble as the first three batsmen—Naik,Engineer and Parthasarathy Sharma departed early. Pataudi joined Vishwanath and we could see from the beginning that the pace trio of Roberts, Julien and Vanburn Holder was too much for him. They were keeping the ball just short of a length and bouncing the ball straight at the midriff. Pataudi was jumping out of the way. Sometimes with tremendous courage he got in line and fended awkwardly. You could see the frustration in his immobile face. His royal demeanour was crumbling. He must have been muttering to himself—“These guys are dominating ME!!” he went off for a walk to square leg after a vicious bouncer steepled up to his face. He swayed away in desperation. In those days there were no chest protectors,no helmets, no real finger protector gloves. When he took guard again, the watery sun came out of the overhead clouds and cast long shadows of the players over the emerald green grass. Vanburn Holder came lumbering in,  pitched on off and middle and the ball rose straight at the Royal chest. We saw a movement to the leg side, then a flash of a cream bat as it swung down in a screaming cover drive that had the ball rocketing to the boundary. We clapped in amazement. The next one from Holder was similar but faster. Again there was the Nawabi sway to the legside. This time the shot was squarer, but with more velocity. The West Indian fielders grinned ruefully. Holder glared at him and then strode back to the top of his run up. He came in with a glint in his eye. This time , the ball reared up faster. Holder seeing Pataudi’s movement directed this on leg stump. Pataudi had read it well, had moved inwards and stroked the ball off the back foot to the long on boundary.The most glorious and difficult shot—a back foot on drive of an express bowler had been executed.That shot lives in my memory still, and whenever I am in a tight spot, I recollect the shot and the scene—a triumphant champion batsman putting his doubts aside and showing who was king—looking on with pride and satisfaction at a red cricket ball destined for the boundary ropes. Holder’s shoulder drooped. The next ball was of a fuller length and Pataudi drove through the covers with a grace  which only he possessed.

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“This couldn’t last—it just could not”, I muttered to myself. It did not. Soon after, Pataudi fell to the wily Andy Roberts who shattered his stumps. The Nawab walked off, his shoulders a little hunched, his India cap still tilted sideways as the crowd almost rose to their feet and started clapping him back. He had played an innings of Royal Mejaj.

In the first innings, Kanhai made 90 with his famous falling over sweep shot.West Indies amassed 390. India in their second innings , thanks to one of the greatest innings seen at Eden Gardens—Vishwanath’s  glorious 139 got a lead of 309. West indies raced to 146/3 at the end of the fourth day with Lloyd and Kalicharan unbeaten. Chandrasekhar the mystery legspinner whose stock ball was the one coming into the batsman had been hammered severely by the West Indian batsmen. When on the 5th morning, the Nawab kept him on, there were rumblings from the crowd. After a couple of boundaries , the comments started flowing. True to his character, the Nawab kept on with him. In the next few minutes, Chandra had clean bowled Lloyd, had Kalicharan caught at slip and Bernard Julien lbw. Bedi was brought back on and the tail cleaned up. India had won a memorable Test match, unexpectedly and from behind. The Nawab had a rare smile on his face. He had been vindicated in front of his in-laws !!! Did this really affect him?? I think not, for he never  believed in all this business of proving himself to others.

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I never saw him on a cricket field again as a player.In all his subsequent roles—he appeared as if those were mantles on him to be discarded after some time.His real self was known to him and his family. I like to think that as rabid cricket spectators we saw him in flashes—a trifle detached, but keenly observant,a batsman of rare talent and a Captain supremo, who played his cricket in the only way he wanted to—with Mejaj.

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Even now, we will raise a silent toast whenever and wherever we meet for a cricket talk, to the Royal Mejaj of a departed Captain who gave us as so often cricket does, important messages on how to live our lives the way we want to.

Monday, August 15, 2011

The Story comes back…..

It is always difficult to write a review of a film made by a known person and who is supported by common friends. The desire to be honest is affected by thinking about the effect of the written word on the associates.

Fortunately Kamaleshwar Mukherjee’s UDO CHITHI saved me from this dilemma for after a long ,long time I watched a movie with unflagging interest from beginning to end. Kamaleshwar walked away from medicine and  after a hard struggle , he established himself first as a successful ad film maker and then as a scriptwriter and Director of Feature films.

Watch this video clip…

http://youtu.be/6Ic_XEllIVk

The success of Udo Chithi is because a story is told. That may sound simplistic , but that is the most important part. The story is supreme—like a jungle stream bending here and there, leaping suddenly over scattered stones, slowing down and then cascading as a powerful waterfall before meeting the mainstream. No where does the writer/director lose control. The pace is tight, the dialogues occasionally punchy, the editing magnificently controlled (probably ArghyaKamal’s finest work) ---but the story remained supreme.

http://youtu.be/VMdZHXCwx_Qhttp://youtu.be/VMdZHXCwx_Q

Aniket (Indraneil Sengupta) an IT professional is a bit of a weakling and a cad. He is guided and controlled by the people around him, indecisive and a victim of his own conscience and physical needs, seeking something he does not have and in the process losing all that he has.He invests in the Share Market heavily on the advice of his friend Rohit (Rajatava Dutta) and loses 42 lakhs!!! He is tempted to invest all of the money his father has willed him—but that will not be available till his father dies. He is comfortable in his family life with wife Raka(Sreelekha) but is averse to devoting time in solving mundane problems like repairing the Kitchen exhaust and teaching his daughter. Familiarity breeds contempt and Aniket seeks excitement in his old schoolmate Kevin (Rudranil) and Sonia’s (Sudipta) Rave Parties. There he meets air-hostess Lilette (Tanusree) and falls for her, developing a relationship and sleeping with her.

http://youtu.be/67XopKH-doA

Aniket’s father is   Mohit (Biswajit Chakravarty) . He has travelled a lot often leaving his wife and child—often for long periods. He comes back to establish an old-age home surrounded by various plants and trees.During this time,when Ani-Lilette were together,  Ani does not respond to phone calls.During this period Mohit had died—further aggravating Aniket’s guilt complex.

Pictures of the Party and Aniket and Lilette’s pictures are published on Facebook. Raka goes hysterical and tries to commit suicide. She leaves with her daughter to live a separate life and records her daughter’s title as her maiden title— trying to wipe out Aniket’s existence from their lives.

Sreya Ghoshal in this great version…

http://youtu.be/HEE8TgZW7g4 

Aniket’s mentor is his previous Physics teacher Farhad (Anjan Dutta), who after losing his daughter to illness, is now bent on creating new engineering concepts and firms.  Aniket’s friend is Subhash (Biswanath Bose) and his wife (Locket Chatterjee)—who have fallen on hard times as Subhas’s factory is on a lockout for the last 17 months.—and who are dependent on Aniket’s handouts. Information comes that the factory owners will lift the lockout but they do not. Subhash’s last hope is gone. His wife opens a beauty parlour which becomes a front for prostitution. Subhash falls back on a small scale adhesive business. His son develops an aggressive mentality and requires psychiatric treatment. One of the most poignant moments is of a 6 year old coming down the stairs with a bunch of pasted National flags for selling. Aniket takes the young boy away  to Farhad where a natural empathy develops between them. Aniket is  manipulated by his co workers at  his office and his subsequent outburst forces the authorities to send him on a long leave.Meanwhile Lilette tests positive for AIDs and leaves the city. Aniket is at the proverbial crossroads.

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However, the markets start changing. A SMS comes from Raka reminding him about the date of their 8th wedding anniversary. With Subhash’s son at his side Aniket faces the future with renewed hope.

All the flashback story is orchestrated by the SMS messages in Aniket’s mobile phone inbox which he starts to delete but finds that each of those messages tell the story of his life in that past year..

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The opening graphics are outstanding and thoroughly in tune with Kamaleshwar’s ad background. The photography is adequate, though there is a jarring DI use in the evening scene at the riverside. The music is  well orchestrated. A couple of songs are  rememberable—Anindya’s Ek Din and Rupam Islam’s Shohor Ballad. Debojyoti Mishra’s background score is  unobtrusive but mood-setting.But the Latino numbers are probably with a view   to impressing Mumbai Directors and Producers.

Listen to Rupam’s lovely song….

http://youtu.be/fPcWVA-MYj4

As far as the acting goes—it is superlative. We are blessed to have so many talented actors all around. Indraneil brings out the negative shades of Aniket very well. Suave, charming, hesitant , and conscious stricken—this is a role Indraneil will treasures for a long time. Sreelekha is a perfect Raka—loving, caring, family lady, but increasingly disturbed by Indraneil’s lack of attention to her. Rajatava is brilliant. Basing himself on the old style Hollywood characters he gives a perfect lesson of timing and closeup expressions. Anjan Dutta and Biswajit Chakravarty are vastly experienced. Rudranil is splendid as usual but has to be careful in not allowing mannerisms to dominate his work. Saswata, Kaushik, Locket and Sudipta act with gusto.

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The surprise packages are Biswanath and Tanusree. Biswanath in the role of the ineffective husband and a non-earner plays the role of his life. The nearest parallel is Uttamkumar’s Ghonada in Parthopratim’s film Jadubangsha—arguably HIS best role. Though Biswanath can never be anywhere near Uttamkumar in any aspect— but this depiction brings back the memories….

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Tanusree is the BIGGEST thing to happen to Bengali films and their heroines. in the last 2 decades. Tall, stunningly beautiful, easy moving, glamorous and with a face in which emotions flow ever so naturally—she dominates this  brilliant cast. The scene in which she repeatedly says that she wants to go back to her daddy because of her HIV status is poignant and memorable.Her career has to be watched with GREAT INTEREST.

However there are  areas in the script which should have been bettered. For a person losing 42 lakhs—one would expect a much more volatile, fearful hero—not so cool and laid back. Indraneil has to be tested for HIV regardless whether he took protection or not. That portion is left hanging.Indraneil is never seen working!!!He is seen in the general pool workplace. Surely Assistant Managers get a cubicle of their own!!!!

Apart from these minor drawbacks, there is a certain feel of the movie which is very pleasing and reminds me about the film Chowringhee. Certainly a film to watch and  discuss because of the issues it raises.Above all, it is a film which may bring more people to the cinema halls. Congratulations to Kamaleshwar—specially in bringing the Story back to where it belongs-- the Forefront!!!!!

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Europe –an Anachronism!!!

Europe is a place of amazing contrasts. While it’s history and Natural beauty is open to all and amazingly maintained—there are few persons on the road or countryside to get acquainted with or know as their lives are kept behind closed doors. In India everything is open!!! Even through a coach ride you can see almost everything you need to know about the Indian way of life!!!!! The pavements in Europe are deserted,roads are filled with cars and huge fields are devoid of workers. Only rarely will you see  people except in a few places—like the roadside pavement eateries which are scattered round the cities like the wild dandelions and the bluebells adorning the country highway sides……

The Natural beauty is phenomenal. Rolling countryside's of France with scattered farm houses and villages, or the stupendous mountainsides and greenery of Switzerland where lakes and waterfalls appear casually like the roadside billboards or direction signage. Italy is flat and busy with heavy industrialization and some very ordinary Graffiti Art smearing inviting walls, whereas Austria is more natural than Switzerland with very warm people and unspoiled mountain sides and buildings making it more like a place to come back often and stay rather than a place to tour. The German Black Forest is dark, mysterious and incredibly beautiful whereas Belgium (mainly Brussels) is quaint and antique with shops selling embroidered works and different styles of chocolate on both sides of cobbled narrow roads. All of these villages have their churches as their highest structures and clock towers which have been in existence for centuries ringing in the hours and witnessing events which are only found in the history books. Amsterdam remains sleepy and under populated with spontaneity appearing only on the weekends in the local square and multicuisine restaurants and dance bars. We felt the burning sun in Italy, lattice moments of clarity and sights obscured partially by clouds and raindrops in Austria, blistering North Sea cold winds in the Netherlands and the free flowing snowflakes which rendered the green fields and dark rocks into white unending bedspreads in Mt.Jungfrau Bach in Switzerland.

The buildings are magnificently maintained as if they had been freshly painted yesterday though with steep admission charges and expensive eateries and memorabilia stores. History and events flash in front like the moving vibrant images through the plate glasses of the tourist buses. If Napoleon is buried in the Les Invalides then Pope John Paul the 6th is embalmed as St.Jerome in the Vatican. If Anne Frank hid in the lonely attics of an obscure Amsterdam Road, then Joan of Arc rode through the verdant fields of New Orleans.

There are many rivers—the Seine, The Rhine, the Tiber, the Amster, the Deka, the Engelberg,the Arno and many others and we saw three of the seven Wonders—Eiffel, Colloseum and Leaning Tower of Pisa.

But the cream of them all were the Art Museums. Obviously the Louvre where the best of creation by human beings are crammed in gallery after gallery—or the outstanding Rijkmuseum and Vincent van Gogh Museum where painters like Rembrandt, Renoir, Pissaro, Vermeer, Monet, Manet, Cezanne, Toulose-Lautrec. Gaugain, Lister, and obviously Vincent Van Gogh share the walls like glittering crystals as in the Swarovski Museum in Wattens in Austria.

Our country is of course blessed with all this dating probably centuries earlier and is a place which has no equals in our heart.

But Europe is a place of pilgrimage where one MUST go in a lifetime and where one can selectively return. If you have not seen  Europe ,you have missed humanity at it’s best, history at it’s most resplendent and Natural Beauty at it’s best preserved state.

 

Sunday, April 10, 2011

The Great Anti-Corruption Show

Democratic India has just chosen or has been made to choose by excited well dressed ,made-up, camera friendly anchors to subvert their democracy. The most powerful person in India, who will judge,and then employ the verdict will be an omnipotent Lokpal who in turn will be selected by a motley group of prominent persons—whose claim to prominence in most cases have been decided by the government. The President of USA, arguably the most powerful man in the world, is elected. The most powerful person in India will be selected. The selection committee is hand picked, not elected. In plain terms, the common law abiding, tax-paying, vote giving, conscientious ordinary person in India, will have no say in this process.

The privileged have quietly increased their privileges.

The talking point between cocktails and cashew will be the nonchalant—“Were you there??”!!!!! For absence” there “ of course will mean that you sadly are not qualified to smell the latest  Chanel…….

However, this may be very unkind to a lot of persons who are genuinely disgusted with the current levels of corruption and find this the only avenue left to voice their protest.And there are a lot of people like that.

My serious concern is whether or not they are being taken for a ride or not? Look at the sequence of events. Anna Hazare starts his fast. Within a day the government starts talking with them.Within a couple of days ministers (not State but all powerful Central Ministers) come to him and starts talking. Anybody who has ever participated in protests like this know that to get ministerial level talks take between 7-10 days at least. Let’s grant that owing to the frailty of Anna Hazare, the government fast-tracked the process.

Sonia Gandhi issues a statement in 46 hours!!! Totally unbelievable.  Sonia Gandhi rarely makes a statement in the Lok Sabha!!!!  Manmohan Singh starts talking sympathetically. Usually the government starts talking tough right from the start to scare away the immediate associates. Here, there was a distinct attempt at cajoling, an overdose of sugar AND honey!!!.

Finally the strangest part of it all. Government gives in within 4 days!!!!! This is a miracle. Was the government afraid of the movement as the cheering Kejriwals will like us to believe? Did India win the day as some headlines will have us believe? A few thousand candle lit protestants, a couple of screeching TV channels, a few SMSes and Facebook twittering  made the mighty Central government concede defeat?

This undue alacrity as a settlement—the astounding Governmental eagerness to concede demands---all indicate a foregone decision, a strong pointer to stage management.

So why will the Congress UPA Government do this? What could be the likely gameplan? Even the Opposition parties were overwhelmed by the speed of the flow of events—managing only a weak whimper from the Left and BJP.

I suspect that the likely target was Sharad Pawar. Now that investigations are revealing his connections to the 2G scam companies, the frequent Food Crises which resulted in a runaway food price elevation, the murky IPL financial imbroglio—all of which has resulted in body blows to the Government one after another. Pawar still retains his private ambition to be Prime Minister by becoming the balancing power in the UPA. Mamata Banerjee leaving a seat for the NCP in the State Elections is highly significant in this equation. The Government does not have the guts or gumption to drop Sharad Pawar. Therefore have a committee of NON-ELECTED body like the LokPal  to do this. Everyone knows Anna Hazare’s dislike of Sharad Pawar. How much more stunning and Grand scale will it be if the LokPal in an opening salvo targeted Sharad Pawar, a member of the Ministerial Committee and sacked him!!!!!  What great shame it would be for Pawar and the NCP??? AND what great enjoyment for the Congress party…. Surely Pawar considering his malignancy and his age will NEVER form a threat anymore to Rahul Gandhi and the Congress…….

However the wily old fox preempted them by resigning from the ministerial committee and is busy shoring up his defenses.

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But this LokPal concept will be enough to hound Pawar and keep him in line for some time till the next  round of elections.  It is a win-win situation for the Central Government. They come out as a responsive, sensitive ruling group, and they can show that they are active against corruption.That is why I believe that all of the last 4 days of Jantar Mantar action was orchestrated.

We are all watching an enthralling political game. Unfortunately our moralistic beliefs, our dream of stamping out corruption, the idealism of our candle holding evening processionists are the packing box cover. The REAL GAME is inside!!!!!!

 

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Eden Gardens loses India-England fixture

"Regrettably, Eden Gardens has not made sufficient progress to justify the level of confidence required to confirm that the venue would be ready in good time," Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, said. "This was no easy decision to take and while it is most unfortunate, it is absolutely necessary."

So, one more way has been discovered to hammer at Jagmohan Dalmiya and the CAB.This will probably be his last stint as an administrator and his opponents will make sure that he goes down as ‘the man who allowed the premier game in the WC to be taken away’.Thus Dalmiya will go to his grave with this tag while the opponent who lost to him by the historic casting vote will chortle with glee by having the last laugh…It is a win-win situation for the onion-price-riser.If the maych is taken away, Dalmiya will get the flak. If it is not, he will be the great saviour who has immensely more power than Jaggu-dada!!!!

Why do I think this is discrimination? Four other stadia in this lot of inspection have been granted extensions—in spite of crossing three deadlines like Kolkata—in the ’hope’ that they will complete the work in 14 days. Remembering that Kolkata will have double the size of work(as it is double the capacity of the other venues)—an equivalent construction time was necessary.

Exclusive Pics: Wankhede far from ready for the Cricket World Cup

(Wankhede Stadium January)

Dalmiya has asked for ten days—i.e. 20 days before the match is held.Is that too much for the ICC to grant? After all the negative publicity about the Commonwealth Games, they were held with style and on time.Given the chance, I have no doubt that they will pull out the stops and hold the match with aplomb.After all, the CAB has an impeccable track record regarding hosting premier matches.With the prestige of the whole State at stake, everybody will respond to the crisis .

Also cancelling the match at this state will result in huge losses to so many persons who have booked tickets, made elaborate flight plans, planned their leave and arranged elaborate tour packages and conferences linked to this event.

Was the CAB negligent? Probably to a certain extent.They did not realize that getting the stadium ready 20 days before was such a rigid point.They were confident of holding the match but did not think that this final ICC sanction was so mandatory. This was a grave mistake. They should have realized that Kolkata always needs to be two steps advanced, where other areas can get away with only one. Moreover,this construction is an engineering project. The builders are Shapoorji Pallonji &Co.—one of the most respected builders in India and VMS Engineering and Design (Ahmedabad)—who are confident of finishing the job within the 7th of February. What is the CAB to do in this regard? Does Dalmia have to learn Construction work at his age?

  

Moreover, the CAB refused to give the excessive number of Hospitality Boxes demanded by the ICC. Rightly so. While all other places bent low to accommodate the greedy ICC officials, Dalmiya demanded adequate share for the local organizing committee (who do all the hard work) specially as the number of seats have been reduced. Moreover the structure of the commentary box was approved long before. Why is the ICC raising a hue and cry now??

All of this when so many venues in UK and New Zealand and Australia are still uncovered and have facilities far less than that of the Eden Gardens.

Adelaide Oval. Australia Note the stands!!!

The writing is clear. The ICC chief and other interested parties have ganged up as they did in the IPL with Saurav Ganguly to deny Kolkata and it’s fanatic fantastic cricket followers the opportunity to visually see and cheer the Indian team on!!!! However there is still time to rectify their mistake….