Sunday, September 21, 2008

Movies

Lage Raho Munnabhai, Rang De Basanti, Wednesday. Different movies - yet a thread thats common to them all.

Gandhi is known as the father of the nation - admittedly I have always been biased anti Gandhi and see no reason to turn that around at all. However Lage Raho quite lucidly captured the essence of Gandhi - protest peacefully and victory will be yours eventually. If you are slapped on the cheek - offer the other one. Your lack of protest will eventually shame the attacker and he will give in. Yet the movie asks the pertinent question. What do you do if you get slapped on the other cheek too ? And Munnabhai promptly shows us the answer - through slapping him back. Non Gandhian but indeed practical.

And thats where RDB takes off from. Protest peacefully - have candle marches et al. But what when those fail? What do you do when you are pushed constantly. Thats when you snap and react and react forcefully. RDB showed the extreme where a bunch of youngsters could assasinate an incompetent defence minister. Protest violently so it registers!

And Wednesday - spoiler ahead if you havent seen the movie yet - registers a similar idea. You carry on with normal life inspite of all the shit that surrounds you. You are numb to blasts in Kashmir, Blasts in Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Surat, Delhi, Mumbai - practically everywhere. You stay at home - wary of visiting public places due to the threat. You put your head down and continue with life. But somewhere sometime the anger boiling inside - albeit slowly - will cross that high limit and then there will be hell to pay.

Maybe that anger will be all too visible now - for the government and the authorities will sense it and act visibly. We might find an operation that strikes at the heart of the likes of SIMI and IM. And then there will yet again be hell to pay. Because if the terrorists dont, the government will at the elections.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

The corridor of uncertainty

A batsman in form usually rocks the scene with his confidence. He would not hesitate to take a swing at that long hop outside offstump even if its the first ball he faces and the odds are that it would go on for the boundary. The inform batsman has no doubt in his mind - he knows he is on the top of his game and would punish any loose ball. Hell - he would even come right down the track to top bowlers and thwack them over their heads without an iota of indecision.
Sometimes the swings might take the edge - but they would still fly to third man for boundaries. But the in-form batsman would take shots even on marginal balls and succeed like success.

It is when the batsman begins to lose form, doubts take over the back of his mind. When he takes his shots - they are mostly tentative pokes usually ending up in edges going in to the slips or that grinning forward short leg. In most such cases, when the batsman walks out - he walks out with a purpose of not failing. He would be extra cautious - not wanting to get drawn into false shots. he wants to get a hang of the pitch, build up familiarity and then once he is in - take his shots.

Yet often in that "getting in" phase - there might just be that one ball, pitched outside off in that corridor of uncertainty - the batsman aims to let go - deciding not to take the shot only to see it coming straight onto the stumps. Plumb and not offering a shot or maybe sometimes deciding to go for it but failing to get the bat down in time. Time to go and take that long walk back to the pavilion yet another time in his career.

Because whether in form or not, the batsman does well to remember the words of the wise man who said "You miss 100% of the shots you dont take!"