Sunday, March 20, 2022

83, the achievement, the movie

Good movie.

I was born in 84, didn’t watch the event live. But as an Indian I have watched the highlights excitedly so many times, however missing out on the story behind the scenes.

Thank you Kabir Khan to help understand that feeling of victory, victory when no one believed, victory when nothing else mattered. It didn’t matter how poor we were, how divided we were or how less the world thought of us, because they didn’t know what was there in our heart, or at the very very very least, one heart.

We had an awful record, one win across two world cups, that too against a team that wasn’t a nation but more of a bunch of Patel’s and Shah’s in some east part of Africa, but we had the experience, the skills that mattered in England and once in a millennium, we seemed to pick the right team at the right location and an absolutely correct choice of the captain.  

An event that engaged civilians,  military personnel, politicians and nay-sayers alike.

Kapil - as he said “What else we here for? We here to win”. Broken English, but, absolutely  clear thought. Righteous inspiration from Mom - play to win.

P R Man Singh and Pankaj Tripathi - standing by the man that believed when most run away because that is much easier. Simply great acting as usual by Pankaj Tripathi.

Yashpal Sharma - highest score in World Cup for India when he scored against the mighty West Indies to inflict their first loss in any World Cup , performing without fear at the biggest stage, brave batting, a lion personified.

Mohinder Amarnath - great focus, understanding the magnitude of the situation, knowing when a talent like Srikanth needs to be let loose, consistent performance with the bat and the ball and the cricketing acumen that makes an all-rounder tick. 

Gavaskar - inspiring the team and Captain, despite a poor personal performance. Not wearing a helmet and relying on his instincts and skills. Toughest role in the movie, kudos to the actor Tahir to keeping it below unnecessary glorifying. 

Sandhu, Srikanth , Patil - tad crazy yet priceless contributions. Flamboyance of Patil, rashness if Srikanth and simple mindedness of Sandhu.

Srikanth in the movie, summed it up the best, a mad Captain believed and hence the team eventually performed.

Kirti Azad , Shastri, Kirmani, Madan Lal -  keeping the team going with performances whenever they mattered the most.

Some of the scenes featuring Shastri really bring out the proper “Mumbaiya” nature of his persevering talent and wit.

Binny - achieved zenith of personal excellence fuelled by a determined, an almost delusional captain.

Vengsarkar - excellence and determination - cut short by excellence (read Malcolm Marshall).

Kudos to Kabir Khan to cast Jimmy Amarnath as his father, a character that epitomized the longing of Indian cricket lover for the team to excel. Only blemish could have been the casting of Patil and Vengsarkar, actors who didn’t show any merits for selection but nonetheless the director got the right stuff out of them.

Farookh Engineer played by Boman Irani, his yearning for the Indian team to dish it out to earn the much deserved respect from a prejudiced English pundits and audience.

Kapil Dev - a miracle himself and performing a miracle, be it the 175, or beating the West Indies twice, to catching the King incredulously, to leading a team from an extremely low-confidence nation, uniting them through sheer determination, almost delusional beliefs, to making it count when it mattered the most (the 175*), understanding the difference between being an excellent potential to performing excellently, an epitome of Indian simplicity, self-belief, determination!! “Loss or win should be evident in the scoreboard not in your eyes” or don’t give up till the end!

Kabir khan - thank you for making a movie about a sports achievement, about the 83’ World Cup and keeping it strictly within the lines (except a few). Thank you for highlighting  some of the nuances of that win - right players for the right conditions, basic principles of cricket, impact of the conditions (Gomes and Richards can be effective bowlers on some day, Binny on some, Roberts and Marshall on other), you always have to take a chance and the value of all-rounders. Capturing the impossibility of containing a storm that was Viv Richards, the king! And the self belief and astute understanding of the game - “You have scored 183 but they still have too, so you have the upper hand!”. Only blemish possibly not showing Kapil shying away from the crowd after that “once in a lifetime catch”.

Best scene has to be Bob Willis setting an off-side only field with India needing just one scoring shot to win, to get his players to safety from an impending Pitch invasion by Indian fans. However it does pale compared to Kapil catching the King.

And the actors to truly surrendering to the characters they played (did they really have any option?)

Parcham lehraa do!!!

P.S : unity might be over-rated but it’s invaluable; inspiration might seem frivolous but it matters; a story might be known but needs to be re-lived, re-told.

Friday, June 11, 2021

@ Tigin of Stamford

How charmed were those days
Those evenings when we would
Just close work at the office
Go and drink as much as we could

That pub in downtown
An Irish place called Tigin
Live music and unsure feet
Beautiful ladies, spirited evening

And that wily old friend
Who knew how to make us talk
And make us drink that one last pint 
And would drive us home, never walk

Endless talks of girls and love
And romance and chance
And of taking that leap
And asking her for a dance

That hope that stayed
As rest all did fade 

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalay

Date of Visit - 5th Feb
(Sunday - lots of pre-montessary school children making a lot of noise. Lot of foreigners too. Me and My friend Yuvraj probably the only representatives of Mumbai in 30-35 age group)

The Museum is housed in a remarkable structure and its environs are surprisingly well maintained.
 



 The museum houses many collections of the Tata Family











The sculpture gallery is quiet special, providing a glimpse into Indian religion, tradition and history.
Artefacts are collected from all over India. Seeing quiet a few from my native place Chaul, was special. The descriptions are also very illustrative and captivating.


 



Lord Garuda in a unique pose 





The Durga figurine on the right (above) is made of bark of a tree Sholapith - simply amazing.





There is a separate section which captures art, sculpture and history of Jainism in India.


The birds and animals section.



 This was an interesting one, this creature (saw fish) washed up onto Mumbai shores around 1930s. It would be so nice if it could make some regular visits now (just to terrorise a few 😊 )





There are also sections for coins, weapons, clothes which make you walk more even after those first 3 hours after which your feet have started feeling the pain.

If you wanted some souveneirs

Did you notice the ubiquitous Indian blessing for the bride?




Coinage of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj - Shivrai Hon
The one on right spells Shri Raja Shiv, the one on the left (reverse) spells Chhatrapati.
Jai Shivaji!!

And about these other coins (notice the part that satavahana dynasty mention mothers clan name with rulers name - the only one)





Just in case the ladies get bored






And then there was Gandhi and Shakespeare (beat that !!)


























The great english bard






Saturday, May 7, 2016

New observances - in the digital world - because we should

Leave that whatsapp group day
Unlike/ Unfriend that dork/devil day
Say Hi after 5 (yrs) day
Change the DP today day - it's been freaking 5 years
Make fake profile day - that friend who thinks he is too cool to be on social network - 1 April
Heritage month - don't share, post originals - entire month - 31 days of July

Monday, April 25, 2016

Uff!! mere ye aadarsh!!

Being principled has always seemed to be a costly option.That the principles have become obsolete is a different matter altogether. What was newly revealed to this blogger, is the correlation of principles which helps them co-exist.

Principles/beliefs in the mix:

  1. Conserve earth, plant more trees
  2. Compassion towards birds and animals, sometimes above and over human life
  3. Though shall sow, and not expect the fruits
Revelation:

I have 3 flower-pots in my apartment. I water them daily. Apart from an over-zealous "Curry leaves" plant that is housed in one of the flower-pot, nothing else has lasted long. The problem - pigeons and sparrows. I have made repeated attempts to plant seeds in the other 2 flower-pots, only to see them sprout, grow a little and then have the pigeons and sparrows ravage on it.
So, I take efforts to water the plants. I see the pigeons and sparrows finish them off. I cannot hit at the birds to protect the plants (Uff!! mere ye aadarsh!! - well actually I do shooo them off many times - but I cant really be with the plan 24*7 - still got a day job). And then the 2 flower pots remain barren, which the pigeons consider a vacancy - and use it as a nursing home. So, my flower pots are blessed with pigeon-lings once every 3 months (and hence not barren?!!). So, while I sow plant seeds I get pigeon-lings which would become pigeons and make my gardening that much more difficult. That is 90% of the story. The rest 10% is the shit. The pigeons/pigeon-lings - shit a lot. Now that could be manure for my plants - so I would plan to sow more seeds going forward, only to see the leaves being eaten off in 3-4 days by the same marauders. And here comes the last principle to rescue - or to dissuade me from victimizing myself - though shall sow and not expect the fruits - in fact what you might reap is pigeon-lings and ..... shit!!



Sunday, January 3, 2016

Sketch(s)

तस्वीर बनाता हूं
तस्वीर नही बनती

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Chemical Tathastu!!

Yesterday a facebook friend posted an event - he got married. I know him from my school years. He was a fun to be with. His facebook post was interesting - "My better 2nd half started" & "bonding between 2 chemical engineers". I wished him the very best. I have become awestruck by marriage (the ceremony, the new relationship and the changed way of life) - and as other English phrases fail me - am a huge fan. So I completely agree with his sentiment, it is indeed his life's better 2nd half. And his wife being his "better half" is such an Indian-English cliche`.
I had not been in much contact with him for some time now - lets say 15 years - that is how most Facebook friendships seem to be - so he being a chemical engineer is something that I would say I knew, but honestly I just have some vague recollection. I wish this "bond between 2 chemical engineers" be always strong. The particular words however, enticed me, taking me back to my HSC years. If marriage is indeed a bond and in this case it being between 2 chemical engineers - it has to be a covalent bond where different atoms share there electrons - no acquisitions, just merger. Let the 2 persons involved share their joys, sorrows, abundance and replenish each other. If only there was a chemical equivalent of Tathastu!!