SKR- Of Loops and Symbolisms Thread #6 - Page 27

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shruthiravi thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
And punishment is what you feel when you watch Manjari's video. The anguish asking Narayan where he is.
Where is the Krishna who has come to give dress to Panchali and where is the Rama who vindicated Sita's purity for eternity.
Where is the Narayan who punished the Ravana and the society who had ravana in their minds. Where is the Krishna who led an Arjun to fight a system that degrade and exploit woman.

Because if he doesnt come it wont take women to become Bhadrakalis which can destroy the life itself once and for all. I guess patience level is reaching the tipping point. Fire is growing inside every lady now.
Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
Did u read about Hasini case(7 year old)
How come few men are so heartless🤢🤢
It's said that one of three rape victims are children
Like u said we r at the verge of patience
As far as children are concerned,
sometimes parents aren't aware of what child goes through
neither do they trust them when they complain
The one who fought for Hasini case too said the same that
Parents should trust their kid when they complain
don't brush it as a misunderstanding on his/her part

There was this show hosted by Ashish
"tujhse naraz nahi zindagi"
It was about survivors
Most of the eps were about women abuse and how they overcame it
I remember one ep when the girl(survivor) appeared herself and
talked about the physical and mental trauma she went through as a child and how
her parents ignored her complaints as misunderstanding
(as she was abused by a senior member of her own family)
That scar went a long way and she got in to a abusive relationship as an adult too
she tried killing herself and survived fortunately
finally when she was taken to a counselor
that's when the Doc found out that she is a victim of child abuse and
her parents were shocked and felt guilty of what she was going through
later they supported her and now she runs a NGO that fights against child abuse

Family support is very important while fighting such crimes
Edited by -Mano- - 7 years ago
Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

Edited by -Mano- - 7 years ago
shruthiravi thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
@Mano Prithivi's post was the first that has come. Nivin also has put it beautifully. Heard Tamil filmdom has also come now
Yes the fire is burning. See rape is the worst form of violence. But is there is a girl out there who has not faced subtle gender discrimination whether at home or at work.

I have not heard about Hasini case. But last year there was a worst case. 2 year old baby girl of a migrant worker was taken and raped. Imagine 2 year old baby (🤢🤢🤢). What will the baby know. Can it even tell what happened to it.

Parents have to listen to their kids. They have to know a child also knows. It also feels good or bad. If someone's presence make the child afraid, feel bad it is time the parents looked at.

If you are abused as a child it is very difficult to have good relationships in your adult life.
Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

'Bahubali' novel writer Anand Neelakantan doesn't want to be India's Tolkien or RR Martin. Here's why...

By Jane Borges | Posted 19-Feb-2017

Writer Anand Neelakantan, who has penned the historical Bahubali novel, tells us why he doesn't want to be India's Tolkien or RR Martin


Anand Neelakantan's first book in the Bahubali trilogy traces the story of Queen Mother Sivagami's rise to power from the time she was 17. Sivagami is touted to be one of the most iconic and enigmatic characters in the story. Illustration/Uday Mohite

It's a sweltering afternoon in Bandra and we are seated in the cool confines of a cafe when a steel blue Mercedes halts right outside. Writer Anand Neelakantan, who is on the driver's seat, steps out and after a quick exchange of pleasantries, pushes forth a request: "Could we do the interview in the car, instead? It will save me towing trouble."

We peep inside and wonder if we ever needed any convincing.But, a year ago, Neelakantan did. Not to sit inside this luxury car " as you'd assume " but to join filmmaker SS Rajamouli's behemoth of a brand, Bahubali. "I thought it was a prank," he says recalling the call he received from Rajamouli, asking him to write a prequel to his 2015 National award-winning historical film series.


A still from Bahubali: The Beginning, which was the second highest grossing Indian film when it released in July, 2015

Just a couple of weeks shy from the release of The Rise of Sivagami (Westland), the Mumbai-based writer, best known for his debut novel Asura: Tale of the Vanquished, admits that things would have panned out differently had he rebuffed that call on his cellphone "as a prank played by a friend".


Anand Neelakantan. Pic/ Nimesh dave

Sensing Neelakantan's discomfort, Rajamouliimmediately booked him on a flight to Hyderabad for a meeting. Sitting on the filmmaker's office table was a stack of 2,000 pages of characterisation that he and his team had put together for the epic saga " the second part of the franchise, Bahubali: The Conclusion, releases in April. "He told me how all the research had potential to be converted into a great back-story to the film series," says the 43-year-old author. But, what Rajamouli was looking for was a master storyteller. And, he'd go to any lengths to find one, even if it meant putting a reputable writer like Neelakantan to test.

The author, we are told, was asked to write 20 scenes in two hours during that same visit. Rajamouli later marked an anxious Neelakantan on a scale of 10. "I managed to score seven and more for 11 of them," he says. That's the story behind how he eventually bagged the deal to write the Bahubali trilogy, the first of which releases on March 7. The third unreleased title will end where the first movie begins.

Neelakantan was given 100 days to complete the first book, which meant wrapping up his television writing projects (Siya Ke Ram, Chakravarthin Ashoka and Hanuman among others) before single-mindedly focusing on creating a storyboard with new characters and a plot that would take readers through the story of the Queen mother, Sivagami Devi, wife of Bijjala Deva and sister-in-law to Amarendra Bahubali's father. Forty new characters and a self-devised vocabulary inspired from Telugu, Tamil and Sanskrit find their way into Neelakantan's historical fiction. Fans of the character Bahubali might be disappointed that the warrior king does not find a mention in the first book. They can take solace in the fact that the seeds of Kattapa's reasons behind killing Bahubali are sown in this narrative. At this point, we interject him with a question we have been itching to ask. "Does he know why? "Yes," he smiles. "But I haven't even disclosed it to my wife."

At the heart of this novel is the journey of Sivagami, a 17-year-old orphan, and her rise to a position of power. But, why cherry pick Sivagami for the book? "As a storyteller, I found that she was the strongest character " even more powerful than Bahubali. Unfortunately, her character could not be fleshed out well in a three-hour film. Both, Rajamouli and I agreed that her story needed to get its due in this trilogy," he says, adding that, "She is the hero of my book."

There are several other she-heroes and villains in this novel that are central to Neelakantan's racy plot. He drops a few names: Ally (the spy woman); Kalika (a conniving devdasi); Kamakshi (a conservative, principled woman). The attempt was deliberate. "Women bring a lot of emotion and depth to a story. The story of a warrior hero might make for great cinema, but, how many pages can you possibly invest on his successes and spoils on the battlefield?" he asks. He clarifies that the book was not written as a response to critics, who slammed Rajamouli for his sexist portrayal of women. Nonetheless, the writer feels that it will definitely silence them.

With a product this huge " Bahubali: The Beginning was the second highest grossing Indian film when it released in July 2015 " Neelakantan is aware he has a responsibility on his shoulders. This is precisely why he re-wrote 80 per cent of the book, 70 days after completing the first draft in early December last year. "Some of my friends who read the book, told me that it reminded them of Lord of the Rings," he says. "That may have been a compliment, but it worried me no end. I don't want to be known as India's answer to Tolkien or RR Martin. Because Bahubali as a film captures the Indian ethos, and it should in no way, resemble a foreign book or idea."

Siya-Ram thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
Anand Neelakantan, Mano Di u like his books?
Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: Cluny13

Anand Neelakantan, Mano Di u like his books?


Havn't read any of his books😆😆
But have heard few of his speeches(audio)
I was surprised to see him mentioning aha nanooru and pura nanooru

He even said that he would like to write a book on Raja Raja Cholan
If he does it, I would like to read it
Edited by -Mano- - 7 years ago
Siya-Ram thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: -Mano-


Havn't read any of his books😆😆
But have heard few of his speeches(audio)
I was surprised to see him mentioning aha nanooru and pura nanooru

He even said that he would like to write a book on Raja Raja Cholan
If he does it, I would like to read it


I read his book rise of Kali duryodhans Mahabharat. The modern day authors justifying villains. Less said the better😆
Don't keep great hopes😉
Mano.M thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: Cluny13


I read his book rise of Kali duryodhans Mahabharat. The modern day authors justifying villains. Less said the better😆
Don't keep great hopes😉


Can Duryodhan even be justified😲
shruthiravi thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
@Mano the perspective matters. I have heard about this book and how it is presented though not read it.
You have watched Mani Ratnam's Ravan right where Ravan is justified. So it happens. Problem is from where you are looking.
If you read MTs Randamoozham you will see Arjuna and Krishna mocked at and Panchali as a woman using Bhima. But Randamoozham is something that should be read.

Read Amish's Scion of Ishkavu all characters of Ramayana are ripped apart, but unlike Randamoozham it doesnt hold you.
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