poptalk

25 things I would say to Kabir Sadanand about his first film, Popcorn Khao! Mast Ho Jao!:

01. Fire your Editor (or get him to switch to organics).

02. Fire the Dubbing department.

03. Sync Sound worked for Chameli, and it would have worked for you.

04. Apologise to your cinematographer for sullying his magnificent work with such a crappy film.

05. Compared to Rashmi Nigam, even Sonu Nigam would have done a better job.

06. Stick to writing comedy dialogue, it’s your strong suit.

07. You do not need two Items in one film.

08. Also, the purpose of an Item Song is to actually spend some time on the Item… oh heck, just see #01

09. Establishing shots were invented for a reason.

10. So was the Plot Curve.

11. I mean, what the hell was the conflict?

12. Tell Akshay Kapoor that he’s in a Hindi Movie, not on a Broadway stage, and that the two do not necessarily demand the same kind of acting.

13. I know the big, expensive edit-suites at Prime Focus have sexy sexy post-effects, but that doesn’t mean you need to use all of them.

14. (come to think of it, maybe you need to switch to organics too)

15. (better yet, quit altogether)

16. Tell the guy who designed the logo to get a dildo or something, man.

17. Also, putting “This Season’s Warmest Love Story!” on the DVD box is just… ew.

18. Three Words: Plot. Coherence. Verisimilitude.

19. On second thoughts: PLOTPLOTPLOTPLOTPLOT

20. Go visit Khadi Bhandar and see what ‘uncool’ kurtas really look like.

21. Give us back the one hour of the film that seems to have been missing.

22. Take away the entire second half except for the Yash Tonk bits.

23. Speaking of which, shame on you for not putting Yash Tonk in any of the ads or posters.

24. Fire Tanisha’s make-up person.

25. Go find a man named Samir Karnik and have an nice, long chat about what you two have done.

argh, my eyes, part one

Just in case you thought I was kidding…

(note, this is exactly the same image that’s on the actual pickle bottles)

manwich

To complete a triptych of food-related photos, the other day I popped down to the local Malayalee sandwich juice guy and ordered, among other things, a chicken fillet sandwich. Upon getting home, I was happy to see that they had labelled the boxes so I didn’t have to open them up and test them.

Of course, what he had written on the box did strike me as a little disconcerting at first:

There’s no accounting for taste.

Speaking of Malayalees and food, yesterday I was at the airport seeing someone off, when who should walk by but that uber-star of Malayalee cinema (not counting Shakeela, of course!), the media magnate of the meeshe and mundu, Mohanlal.

I had half a mind to shout, “Hey, your restaurant sucks!” but seeing as I was surrounded by literally hundreds of my more southern Malabar-coast cousins, all of whom swarmed towards the star the nanosecond they caught sight of him, I decided against it. I wouldn’t have lasted more than three seconds anyway. This was not the time to be going toe-to-toe with the (rather hefty) Mohanlal on the matter of how the prawn curry was inconsistent (not to mention the fact that his restaurant is called “Mohanlal’s Taste Buds” — I mean, what da fug?).

The Bangalorean parts of my genes told me that the proper thing to do was to write to the Deccan Herald, in a prolix letter that must begin, “Sir, Esteemed Yourself is being hailed by Humble Myself to bring to kind attention of All-Selves the matter of…etc, etc.”

The Mangalorean parts of me wanted to forget such trivial matters, and to discuss the price of gold in a lengthy inner monologue.

The Mumbaikar part of me told both of them to shut up.

This reminds me of the time I saw Nikhil Advani in Oxford Bookstore, Mumbai. I didn’t recognise him at the time (“Hmm, that guy looks familiar.” “Of course he does, he looks like Droopy!” “No, I mean, besides that…”), but I’m pretty sure I would have wanted to say, “Couldn’t you have just killed Shah Rukh quick and saved us all from a bitch of a migraine?”

Today in the supermarket I passed the condiments aisle, and legions of little Mohanlals grin at me from their branded pickle bottles, the contents of which could probably eat through steel in less time than it takes to toss an appam.

He may have millions of fans, and a restaurant, and his own brand of pickles, but I have Chicken Fellate Sandwich.

And on a final note, I drove by Simran’s Appa Kadai, and tell me, why on earth would I want to go to a restaurant that serves some Punjabi girl’s father kadai-style?

dear departed

apogee

crispy takeover

Argh.

They’re all gone.

Two weeks ago, while packing my bags for Dubai, I very carefully placed a clear plastic pack wrapped in the softest clothes I had into my handbag. Today all the contents are gone. I have a distinct urge to book a ticket on the next flight to Mumbai, but alas, even if I could go there now I would not be able to replace the contents of the package.

Every year around Diwali, in Dadar, bamboo scaffolding stalls are propped up on the pavement and draped in gaudy red and saffron swathes of cloth, and in these are sold all manner of things we tend to consume during Diwali, like laddoos and chiwda and ghatia; you know, stuff you give to guests when they come over.

But, most importantly, they sell chaklis. They sell the best damn chaklis on earth, and now all the chaklis are gone. And, since Diwali is over, so are the stalls.

What makes it even weirder is that the stalls are operated in some way by the Shiv Sena, as I understand it. Now, here’s a bit of free advice from Uncle Vishal; if the Siv Sena stopped being a political party, calling a bandh every three days, and only sold chaklis all year round, they might actually end up ruling the world and people will love them for it.

Plus we’ll get their chaklis all year round.

Argh, now even the crumbs are gone.

I cry.

leeward

the sheltered life

exobiology

and once, a piece of pepperoni -- oh, what a day that was!
1

allium

vampire proof

hangman

any last requests?

voltage

BzZzZzZzZzZt

corona

I knew I should have put more sunblock on