09.01.07

Shakespeare versus Movie quotes

Posted in movies, thoughts at 12:55 am by gnsarma1976

My first post. Not my first time writing, though. Written a few scientific papers but thats a story for another day. Lately have been reading a few blogs on the web. Not the politics-based ones but general ones which give a glimpse into someone else’s mind.

I will describe myself in a later post - what I do, why I do what I do etc. When I am in the mood to do so.

Alright. Now about the title of my post. I figured since the first step is always the most difficult, I will start with something that I am very comfortable with - Movies. (Science was also a possibility but since I just finished with my day here which was full of experiments, I don’t want to talk about it for now).

Thinking about movies and dialogs. I remember having conversations with my grandfather a few years back. He would always quote some famous author (Dickens, Shakespeare, Hardy and so on) when he wanted to make a point. Clearly this required a good memory about the book which would in turn, mean that he had read that book with great care. I don’t claim to be a voracious reader but I do have the habit of reaching for a book instead of the remote. However, I really cannot quote these books. When I feel like making a point in a conversation, the only things that come to my head are movie dialogs. It could be any movie, independent of language, culture, national or regional origin.

I don’t know the reason for this. Its not that I don’t read the books carefully. I remember the names of characters from books and what happened to them. Perhaps its the generation that I belong too. A generation that is sandwiched between the ‘Shakespeare’ folks and the ‘how r u? i m doing gr8′ kids. A generation that knew Vijay’s pain when he lay dying in the temple. A generation that said Yippee Kayay with John Mclane. A generation that wished Jai wouldn’t have to die near the bridge. A generation that couldn’t understand how Aida could be so attached to her piano ……

No answer to the question and …….. the juice just ran out, so I will stop here.

G

P.S. The book I am reading right now is - Haruki Murakami’s The Wind-up Bird Chronicle.

2 Comments »

  1. kyla said,

    September 25, 2007 at 3:48 am

    Hi! I love Haruki Murakami’s books too.. so dreamlike yet so every-day as well. I recently read my first non-fiction book of his - about the Tokyo Subway gas attack, and that was also very well written. Read quite a few of his other fiction books but my memories of them get all mixed up together and I’m never sure if I’m making parts of them up in my head or if they are for real.. I love it.

  2. gnsarma1976 said,

    September 25, 2007 at 6:24 pm

    Thanks for the comment. I discovered Murakami very recently and I loved the book. So many layers and so many unanswered questions, which lets the imagination run wild.

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