Sunday, July 28, 2013

Off to Japan...

Dear readers (despite the number :P),

Thanks for stumbling over this venture of mine. :) I am going to Japan for ten days. Will be back soon and write more!

Love,

Eccentrica 101

Friday, July 19, 2013

Meerut girl Razia Sultan receives first UN Malala Award (Rediff News)

Razia Sultan (Image source)
How very inspiring! 

A former child laborer is now fighting against the menace of Child Labor by door-to-door campaigning and spreading the importance of child education. She has marched not only in her region, but across different parts of the country as well as Nepal.
 
A native of Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, the fifteen year old Razia Sultan will be awarded the first UN Malala award to commemorate Pakistan's Malala Yousafzai's contributions towards protesting against Taliban's ban on women's education. She has already changed the lives of 48 children by admitting them into schools.

It's a commendable feat - emerging from the shackles of child labor yourself and being a proponent of child education that too at such a young age!
 
Go Razia! We're vey proud of you.

...............................
I would like to thank my brother for bringing my attention to this article.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Bihar midday meal tragedy: Principal on the run; minister attacked (TOI)

Click here for the link

  • Principal absconding - Raw material from principal's husband
  • Death toll reaches 24
  • Food didn't undergo quality check
  • Principal suspended - Is that enough? Where is she seeking refuge?
  • No arrests made so far
  • Heart wrenching pictures of villages digging graves for mass burial (Image copyrighted by The Times of India)
 
WHERE IS OUR CONSCIENCE -  Is it so easy to flee after murdering TWENTY FOUR young children and poisoning countless others??

- Eccentrica 101

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Bihar midday meal horror: 22 children die in Saran, 50 students fall ill in Madhubani (TOI)

 
It's a shame that poor children are served such trash in the name of midday meal - let alone being nutritious, this "food" claims their lives.
 
How ironic is this - this is the face of most of the Indian population and these kids DO pay school fee to attend school. Lets take an example, my mother teaches at a municipality school in Delhi and her students pay tuition. It's their money that has made my family live such a comfy life as we benefit directly from these kids' money in the form of my mother's salary. Now some will argue about how meagre the tuition is - let's just say "No students, no school; no school, no teachers and no teachers, no salary". This makes incumbent on my mother to teach her students well and she is among the very few who do their jobs in government schools.
 
I don't want to make this an oversentimental rant but my family and I are just next to primary in this food chain. We ALL pay taxes which should ideally go in the betterment of the society but we all know that only a fraction of it actually goes into the real work. Most money goes in the pockets of those who abuse their power and the result is no roads, no infrastructure, no potable water...NOTHING! We appoint these people and they are our servants but all they do is stash wads of our money and pass on their genes of corruption to their coming generations. This is a vicious circle that keeps going on.
 
This horrific incident is the direct result of people not doing their jobs. I mean how hard can it be? The government pays enough to live a decent life. Why do you want the money that's not even yours!
And then of course there is the tainted politics going on. The opposing party doesn't want the ruling party to stay in power - the easiest way is to bribe or in other words, just buy the conscience of people - it comes cheap, very cheap in India. There is over 1.2 billion, who cares about a handful, eh?
 

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

4 Pahariya girls dragged out of hostel, raped by 25 drunk men (TOI)

SHAMEFUL, ABOMINABLE, HORRIFIC, DISGUSTING - I will fall short of adjectives to describe this incident! (4 Pahariya girls dragged out of hostel, raped by 25 drunk men)

Rapes in India are on an all time high or at least we see them everyday strewn ALL over the paper, making new headlines everyday.

And I DON'T believe in the psychoanalysis of rapists; it's such a horrendous crime!

What/who can be blamed? The government? The laws? The sex taboo? The people? Ignorance? Everyone? Everything? I don't know what to say - I am speechless!

We definitely need very strong laws and strong action against the perpetrators. Twenty years or even life time imprisonment is not enough for rapists. We should set an example and show it to the ENTIRE country that if anyone sexually abuses someone, they will be castrated and then stoned to death! 

In a country like India, where a woman's chastity is her prime ornament, half of such horrific acts are not even registered with the police. It's the 21st century - we must get over such ridiculous beliefs and practices. Any kind of sexual assault is incriminating and there is nothing more foolish than acquitting the attacker on moral/cultural/social."duniya kya kahegi" norms! This encourages them to go one step further every time. 

I am leaving this article open ended. I really want people to participate!

Monday, July 15, 2013

Capote (Film) Review

 “There's such a lot of world to see. We're after the same rainbow's end,
waiting 'round the bend, my huckleberry friend …”

Those are some of the treasured lyrics to Moon River from the unforgettable Hollywood classic Breakfast at Tiffany’s. The naïve, eccentric Holy Golightly donning a black Givenchy dress, wearing her hair in a tall bun decorated with an ornate broach, blinking her lovely eyes spreading the splendor of Aurora Borealis, holding a long cigarette holder immortalized Audrey Hepburn both as a style icon and as an artist. A loose adaptation of Truman Capote’s novella under the same name, the movie made Capote a household name among the cinemagoers and that’s where I learned about him, henceforth this film became a must-watch for me.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/da/Capote_Poster.jpg
Image Source - Wikipedia
Capote is a film with uncommon excellence; it mostly revolves around the time when Capote authors his most famous book In Cold Blood and later years when he struggles with a mental breakdown so strong that he’s not able to finish a single book.

The film opens with a farm shot with blowing crop; you know it’s dark right from the beginning: the lack of color, the frosty, wintry backdrop makes it quite obvious. And there a ghastly murder! Capote (Philip Seymour Hoffman), the openly gay writer of Breakfast at Tiffany’s plans to cover the tragedy and travels all the way from New York to Kansas with his confidant Nelle Harper Lee (Catherine Keener). There he interviews people, feels maladjusted because of the pariah-like reception he gets. Initially brushed off by Dewey (Chris Cooper), the lead detective, but then warmly welcomed by his wife, he somehow manages to speak to the suspects. In one of the pictures, he observes that the convicts put a pillow prior to killing the members of the Clutter family, as if singing them a lullaby to deep sleep. Riveted, he plans to write a non-fiction book documenting the killings. Rest of the story revolves around the ping-pong between the Capote’s buried love for Perry Smith (Clifton Collins Jr.), one of the men and his lust for fame; how he gains Perry’s confidence (“I don’t want the world to think of you as monsters.”), the building of his affection for him, how Perry unveils his dark past and how each time on Perry’s inquiring, Capote convinces him that he had not started penning the book then even after having finished almost of the book. My favorite dialogue is between Nelle and Capote, when she realizes Capote’s feelings for Perry, after which he explains to her, “He and I grew up in the same house, while I took the front door, he took the backdoor.” Capote keeps finding lawyers to fend the case though there was an ulterior motive to it. The film ends with explicit execution of Perry and a distraught Capote crying to Nelle that he could have saved him, to which she replies, “Maybe not; the fact is you didn't want to…”

Philip Seymour Hoffman has portrayed the writer just as perfect as you could imagine. Playing an openly homosexual artist troubled with his fame and the affection he holds for a drifter isn’t easy. I saw Hoffman for the first time in ‘Punch-drunk Love’ as a sturdy goon running a phone sex business, the second time in Boogie Nights as a closeted gay man having strong feelings for the protagonist (And yes, there is the chronological discrepancy!), both of which are polar; led me into thinking with countless exclamation points, “What a fine actor! How versatile! Can play almost any character with the utmost ease!” This time contrary to the supporting roles, he is the protagonist himself. He wears the cloak of the writer so well that you can hardly figure he’s acting. You can sense each nuance, the slightest care he has lent – the way he puckers his lips when he sips a drink, the posture in which he sits with his legs tightly crossed against each other, the way he makes jokes, his speech, his voice – little does he falter. Clifton Collins is excellent as Perry Smith, with each detail well-studied, somehow reminds you of Steve Buscemi. Catherine Keener is amazing as Harper Lee and Capote’s close friend. The film in fact has several references to her book, “To Kill a Mockingbird” Rest of the actors, although brilliant shrink into vestiges.

Finally – Is the film actor’s or director’s? Undoubtedly, the actor’s! 

Rating - 5/5

© criticalramble.blogspot.com

Perfume collection

Perfumes in this collection:
  • Ralph Lauren Romance
  • Gucci Guilty Black 
  • Burberry Brit
  • Versace Versence
  • Alien by Thierry Mugler 
  • Nina by Nina Ricci
  • Samples - Marc Jacobs Daisy, CK One
  • Euphoria by Calvin Klein 
  • Victoria's Secret (VS) - Bombshell Summer Edition
  • VS Bombshell
  • VS Noir Tease
  • VS Body
  • VS Angel
  • VS - Very Sexy
  • VS - Heavenly
  • Aquolina - Pink Sugar Hair Perfume
  • With Love - Hilary Duff 
Will review all these fragrances very soon...

© criticalramble.blogspot.com