Tag: Kangana Ranaut

Munnar, at last

Day 4 :

After our breakfast,  we checked out of Pine Borough, bid goodbye to Kodaikanal and started for Munnar, in the last leg of our vacation.

As soon as we were out of the Tamil Nadu border, the climate felt sunny and mild and I was happy we were not in cold, chilly climate.

N stopped at a random eatery for his breakfast, while Mr.Bee and I had a coffee and tea respectively. The stall had photo of Amma, Jayalalitha and somehow, that reminded me of Thalaivii movie of Kangana Ranaut! (Beats me! Why did they cast a pahadi North Indian to play a pukka South Amma! Incidentally,  I also loathe the Chandramukhi 2 of Kangana. What a royal waste of time!)

Anyway, on our way to Munnar, just as we entered the Kerala border, we stopped for lunch, we were famished. We halted at Safair, which serves the worst food ever. We could hardly eat a mouthful of food. It must be heaven for non-veg customers, because, they were lining up like bees, but it is absolute bekaar and tasteless eatery for vegetarians. We could hardly finish eating the two dishes we ordered, lemon rice and curd rice!

N was surprised we returned in less than half an hour. We ate the fruits we bought, before exiting Kodaikanal.

I also saw a restaurant which was Bethel Suji restaurant and I remembered the famous dialogue  of Phoebe, “Who names their child Bethel?” LOL. (I am FRIENDS fanatic!)

GBee began counting bikes, all those which he saw on the highway and his score reached 1757. ( He entertained himself this way, because KBee would sleep as soon as we were inside the car!)

Even though we knew there were not any good restaurants,  we stopped at Safair because we wanted to take a scenic route to Munnar and NOT the shortest route. We took the Gap road. It is the best! ( Always go for the scenic route, not the shortest route!)

Gap road – Munnar, the most scenic road with tea plantations!

We stopped at many viewpoints, took photos and had fun. Munnar is basically heaven and just looking at it is not enough, you should also be mindfully present to enjoy it! Here, cell is just a distraction.

We saw all the tea and coffee estates, most of them belonging to TATA group, who have them for a lease of 999 years! Trespassing is prohibited, so, no photos from inside the beautiful tea estates.

At one viewpoint, since we hardly had a good lunch, we stopped for sweet corn, which is easily available along with Maggi, along the road at all the viewpoints. All the 4 of us were happily chomping our sweet corn cobs when Mr.Bee saw a group of monkeys running towards us. I swear they were at the top of the hills when we started eating. As we started eating, they came down hill, waiting to cross the road to snatch our precious corn.

Mr.Bee wanted to buy us some time, so he threw his cob towards them. They got distracted for a bit. I asked the kiddos to eat their corn, fast. I chomped as much as I could before throwing mine too, at the hunger- striken monkeys. (Situation called for a sacrifice!)

We then rushed towards the car. N banned us from eating in car and monkeys won’t let us eat in peace!

We also had to throw away the kids corn cobs, before going ahead. The kiddos found the throwing away of half eaten corn cobs towards the direction of monkeys, very entertaining! (They were like, mom let me throw, let me give it to monkey.)

We took in as much beauty as we can, staring at our surroundings and all. Kerala government is strict about the cleanliness, which means we get to see wire bins in unique shapes at almost all important locations, for collecting plastic waste like bottles.

Plastic disposal bin

After spending most of our afternoon checking out the streets of Munnar, we checked into the White House hotel.

The kids were highly impressed with the White House hotel. KBee was so sweet as to believe we were staying there forever.  GBee was laid back and knew, we were only on a vacation.

After quick baths, changing into fresh nightwear, we reached the in – house restaurant,  ordered our dinner.

We also made plans for the next day, after discussing with our hotel manager.

We went to the kids play area, played for sometime (kids had fun) and returned to our room.

The room service brought our dinner, which was simple as ever, fried rice, watermelon juice for all.

Since the weather was not cold like Kodaikanal (Oh, how I hated wearing socks in the hotel room in Kodaikanal), we had fan running at full speed and AC on, we slept like logs!

P.S:

1. Gap road in Munnar is the best. I remembered all the movies I had loved, thanks only to the beautiful tea plantations and estates which were in the backdrop, demanding my attention!

Remember Chennai Express and Life of Pi?

2. India has huge potential,  but maintaining the cleanliness is the problem.  Let’s hope for the best!

Till the next post,  bubye!

Kantara – A Review

I had watched Kantara in the beginning of October and had even written down the review the next day. But due to some unforeseen circumstances (health of KBee) i was forced to shelf the post and let it gather dust, cobwebs and the likes!

Firstly, I am going to be very frank in my review and it is completely my opinion and I have a right to write! (It looks like the beginning of a political speech, but no, I sometimes manage to have strong emotions on certain topics)

Secondly, who has not watched Kantara? If you have watched it is well and good, if not, I advice you to go to the nearest laptop or T.V. , login to Prime and watch it!

I never watch a movie, until and unless I like either the trailer, poster or the  word of mouth talk! I have very little patience for mediocre movies and tear jerking stuff. (Life already has loads of problems and ups and downs. Who the hell wishes to go to a theater, pay 200 bucks or more and cry again in an A.C hall, in front of strangers? Not me!)

After the buzz about KGF 2 died down (which I didn’t watch), I read tweets from different actors online, raving about Kantara. (I don’t follow any actor on twitter, but I still found the tweets, some how in my homepage!)  Since I hardly knew either Tulu or Kannada, I had no idea what the title meant. I googled it and found out it meant ‘a mystical forest‘ and that’s when I decided to watch the movie.

*** SPOILERS AHEAD***

The opening scene is the back story of the present day.

A King, who has everything he needs, wealth, a happy family and vast kingdom, yet has no peace. He wanders in his kingdom alone,as advised, reaches a spot in the forest, where he finds the Deity of the tribals. He wants the Deity for himself. The Panjurli demands vast lands for his followers, in exchange of coming with him. If the promise is broken, ever, then the Guliga Deiva, a violent servant of Panjurli, will exact revenge! The king accepts. (I may be wrong, but I think the Panjurli at the beginning must have been the grandfather of Shiva.)

Years later, the king’s son breaks the promise by demanding the forest lands, which are worth in crores and demeans the Panjurli. The one performing the Bhoot Kola (as seen in the movie poster) at the beginning is the hero, Shiva’s father. (Dual role by Rishab Shetty as both father and son) The moment the performer runs into the forest and disappears, the titles roll and that was a bang of an opening.

Once the story begins, it shows how Shiva doesn’t respect the very animal pig (or the Varaha Roopa, which is actually their Diety), hunts and kills pigs on a regular basis, eats their meat, feeds the leftovers to his dog, does drugs and also drinks at the drop of a hat.  He is probably the worst guy to lead a rebellion or even a movie for that matter! He is brash and arrogant, doesn’t have a job except being the right hand man of a wealthy Zamindar, the heir to the King we see at the beginning of the story. ( Instead of referring to him as King’s successor, I will refer to him as  zamindar, to make it easy.) The curse of the Panjurli had indeed come true, because the Zamindar’s son is physically and mentally challenged.

The rest of the story shows some extra characters of the heroine who is a constable, the hero’s mom, some other side kicks and a Bhoot Kola performer who is Shiva’s cousin. Since Shiva’s father vanished into the Kantara forest, Shiva avoids performing the Bhoot Kola, which is their family tradition. His cousin takes up the mantle instead of Shiva as the Bhoot Kola artist.

It is also shown that, whenever Shiva participates in immoral activities, he dreams of either Varaha Roopam or his father in Bhoot Kola attire. It shows that, in spite of his rogue exterior, he is still a God fearing man. We get brief glimpses of his father, appearing suddenly in his dreams and those moments were the only reason I continued watching the movie. (It thrilled me to no end). Rest of the movie was passable. Nothing much to write about. So I will just jot the main points.

As the story progresses, it becomes apparent that there are only 3 important characters. One, Shiva. Two, the forest officer whose aim is to save the forest from smugglers. Three, the Zamindar, the villain. (He is one bad-ass villain, as we can see in the climax)

Zamindar kills Shiva’s cousin, to demoralize the tribals. He tries to pin the murder on the forest officer. But, one blacksmith, who is high on drugs, reveals the truth to Shiva and the pre-climax fight sequence happens.  (After the death of Shiva’s cousin, we get a subtle hint of who is going to be the next Bhoot Kola performer, i.e. Shiva. There is an under current of anticipation for the big reveal. The build up for the final act of Kantara, the movie!)

When the whole village along with the forest officer gathers to fight against the zamindar, Shiva is still reeling under his new found gyaan. (In the middle of the movie, there is this scene about Shiva’s cousin dreaming about what may happen in near future to Shiva. This indicates that Bhoot Kola performers sometimes have premonitions and that is what is happening to Shiva during the climactic scenes. He is in a daze!) He knows he will die. He is still coming to terms with this information.

After a lag, Shiva gets into the fight, protects the forest officer, because he is the only one he trusts with his life. One of Zamindar’s chamcha kills off Shiva, by hitting his head, right at the center. (A hit on the head at the top, generally results in Kapala Moksham! There is no way anyone can ever survive that. This is the truth.)

That’s when Shiva’s father breathes new life into Shiva, by making the unique sound, synonymous to the Bhoot Kola.(He increased his son’s life span a little for the sake of the helpless tribals)  All hell breaks loose.  The violent Guliga Deiva, the servant of Panjurli, acts through Shiva and kills off the villain. (The zamindar, till his last breath is not scared at all, because he thinks Shiva is only acting!)

Finally, Shiva, turns into a Bhoot Kola performer (while Varaha Roopam song plays in the background), tells all the tribals the forest officer and other landlords to stay together and be happy.  Just then, Shiva’s father calls him from the Kantara forest, signalling, his borrowed life has come to an end. Shiva rushes into the forest, just like his father and unites with him and both disappear.

Final word:

No one can ever beat the acting Rishab Shetty managed to do at the end. Not a single dull moment in the climax. The movie is elevated beyond anything, only through the last 10 minutes of acting. This moment, I may never forget!  I had goosebumps through the climax. I re-watched the climax, a little over 10 times. (I only watch a movie once and never comeback to it. I rarely listen to the same song twice. That says a lot about how much I liked this one.)

Let me not forget to add the supporting cast were also apt and had done justice to their role. But there is always one black sheep! (He spoils the perfect moment by raising his hand too early!)

And God, what a song to accompany the mind blowing acting. Varaha Roopam is a mesmerizing song, divine and memorable. The shehanai (Sannayi in Telugu) and violin make the song a classic.

P.S:

1. Who is Rishab Shetty? How can one direct a movie and also act perfectly? I admire multi taskers, because it is soooooo sooo hard!

2. There was a controversy regarding the Varaha Roopam song. The Kerala based band, Thaikkudam Bridge went to           court, saying their song has been copied.  Frankly speaking, even if the Varaha Roopam was inspired by the Navarasam  of Thaikkudam Bridge, I am willing to forgive it.  Why? Because I like it better, sorry guys!

3. One of my favourite scenes is this..the casual head flick to send a goon flying, this one giving himself an aarti!

4. I think there is going to be a prequel to Kantara. I wonder how even Rishab Shetty can live upto the extremely high expectations!

On a different note, after the movie was released, Karnataka government has taken up the welfare of the Kola performers, which is a welcome move. (Who knew such Kola existed before Kantara? )

Until my next post, cheerio friends.

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