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Showing posts from January, 2014

Chicken-Man

Sometimes you just want to be a Chicken. Came across this hoarding advertising a Chicken shop somewhere in a place called 'Muvattupuzha' in Kerala. -0- April 1. 2014 Came across this one somewhere near Kakkanad Ernakulam

Subarnarekha

Ritwik Ghatak's Subarnarekha (1962) -0- Subarnarekha (1962) is often described as Ritwik Ghatak's critique of Partition but that is just an understatement. There is a lot more actually happening in the film. A lot more that is said without being said. The film is in fact Ghatak's meditation on human beings and their condition under cyclic churning wheels of history. It about people going through same deceptive loops over and over again. According to the film, the wheel of history is mechanised, predictable. People would go through the same story over and over again. Failures leading to hopes, false hopes and fallen hopeless people getting up and and running again towards the golden shore, beyond which lies a paradise. We only make fresh mistakes with every fresh beginning. The cycles forever going. In the first few minutes of the film the directors lays before us the process by which the film will emphasis this cyclic churning of history. We hear about Gandhi's

Manoj Kumar's Churchill feat. Nirad Chaudhuri

A parody poster starring Nirad Chaudhuri as Churchill. 1983. Published in Weekly SUN. It was in response to Attenborough's Gandhi. Came across it in 'Laughing Matters: Comic Tradition in India'  (1987 ) by Lee Siegel. -0-

Ankhi Pakhi by Abanindranath Tagore

Came across it in 'Art and Nationalism in Colonial India, 1850-1922' by Partha Mitter (1994) -0-

Sleep to the sounds of Kungfu

The best tribute to Shaw Brothers came from India.  The scene from Pushpak (1987).

Illustrated: How to drape a conventional sari

From 'Costumes of the East' (1971) by Walter Ashlin Fairservis, Jr.

Enfield Mini Bullet Ad, 1982

"It'll mean more to you with every passing year" -0-

Hindu afterlife for adulterers

These may look a bit Japanese for their bizarreness but these are Hindu afterlife punishments for adulterers. From the book 'Cults, customs and superstitions of India. Rev. and enl. ed. With illus. from photographs and from drawings by William Campbell Oman' (1908). The author picked these at Pushkar fair. -0-