Sunday 31 January 2016

SAY NO TO RACIAL DISCRIMINATION ! #BlackIsBeautiful

When I Born, I Black,
When I Grow Up, I Black,
When I Go In Sun, I Black,
When I Scared, I Black,
When I Sick, I Black,
And When I Die, I Still Black.......


And You White Fella,


When You Born, You Pink,
When You Grow Up, You White,
When You Go In Sun, You Red,
When You Cold, You Blue,
When You Scared, You Yellow,
When You Sick, You Green,
And When You Die, You Gray.................


And You Calling Me Colored ?

Thursday 28 January 2016

Top 10 Movies of 2015

10. Son of Saul

In Son of Saul, director László Nemes has made one of the toughest and most disturbing films of 2015. A Holocaust drama stripped of of any shred of sentiment or decency, this film is a guided tour through Hell on Earth that is as immersive as it is horrifying. Shot almost entirely in lengthy close-ups and over-the-shoulder shots, Nemes places the audience squarely in the shoes of his title character. He is so used to the waking nightmare that is his life that he walks, head down, through out-of-focus horrors that have simply become just another thing he lives with now. The immediacy ofSon of Saul has to be seen to be understood and fully appreciated, as does Géza Röhrig‘s lead performance, which demands we find a connection with a man whose humanity has been wrung out of him, leaving a blank husk who fights for survival and nothing else on a daily basis. Son of Saul is an unforgettable portrait of a ruined man and the awful place that stripped him of his spirit.

9. Inside Out

The Pixar factory tends to churn out a bonafide masterpiece every few years, but Inside Out may be their greatest achievement yet. In many ways, this is the beloved animation studio’s smallest movie, telling the story of young Riley and her emotionally traumatic move to a new city. But within her mind, director and co-writer Pete Docter finds a vast landscape full of color and whimsy, grief and reality. As our young heroine powers through one relatable incident after another, her struggles play out in the exploits of her personified emotions, namely Amy Poehler‘s Joy and Phyllis Smith‘s Sadness. These adventures, while never anything less than hilarious and thrilling, ultimately build to one of 2015’s most powerful statements: grief is as important as happiness and sadness is the key to empathy. Inside Out has jokes for days, but it is the emotional catharsis of the final act, where the pain that accompanies letting go of childhood is internally dramatized, that makes it a masterpiece. And Bing Bong. Oh, Bing Bong.

8. Ex Machina

Set in one location and almost exclusively focusing on three characters, Alex Garland‘s Ex Machina is one of those small films that wears its intentionally limited scope as a badge of honor. This a little movie built upon massive ideas, a tight, lean thriller that contains more chilling science fiction concepts than genre films ten times its size. As an enigmatic tech genius billionaire who has built a high-functioning artificial intelligence in his isolated estate, Oscar Isaac creates one of the most disturbing villains in recent sci-fi history. As his employee who gets roped in to perform a Turing Test on his boss’ top secret creation, Domhnall Gleeson reveals himself to be one of modern cinema’s great secret weapons. And as Ava, that above mentioned artificial intelligence, Alicia Vikander proves herself to be a real deal movie star, crafting a femme fatale whose personality and complex motivations are terrible yet wholly justified. As a sci-fi thriller, Ex Machina is absorbing and frightening stuff. As a sly commentary on how men in the tech industry treats and views women, it is nothing short of a genre masterpiece.

7. Carol


Evocative and nuanced, Carol is the kind of movie that politely ask you to meet you halfway. Its characters, a young clerk and the older woman she falls for in 1950s New York City, must hold their affections and desires close to their chest. One misspoken word, one wrong glance, and their worlds will come crumbling down. This means Carolis a romance built around two women whose longing for one another is told through subtle looks and dialogue with double meaning. To carefully watch these two carefully fall in love with one another is to fall in love with them as well. DirectorTodd Haynes wields melodrama like precision weapon – there is just enough of his Douglas Sirk fetish on display to heighten the drama, but not so much that the film ever loses touch with its complex emotional core. Haynes and cinematographer Edward Lachman frame their low-key but deeply moving tale of forbidden love in painterly compositions, where colors often tell us everything we need to know. Carter Burwell‘s score fills in all of the blanks the characters leave in every spoken sentence. Costume designer Sandy Powell ensures that both leads are impeccably dressed. Most importantly, Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara give career-best performances, breathing life into characters who could have easily felt cold and distant. This is a beautiful film in every way.


6. The Hateful Eight

With The Hateful EightQuentin Tarantino has provided a vicious retort for Inglourious Basterds and Django Unchained. While his previous two films were about giving the victims of historical wrongs a chance to fight back and find bloody, fanatical satisfaction on the movie screen, the latest effort from modern Hollywood’s most consistent provocateur rubs your nose in the sins of the past, giggling the whole time. Shot with antique CinemaScope lenses on 65mm film, The Hateful Eight looks like a high-pedigree epic but feels like Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia‘s equally sleazy cousin (who just finished reading some Agatha Christie). For the its first 90 minutes, the members of Tarantino’s all-star ensemble feel each other out, speaking in riddles, half-truths and outright lies. In its second 90 minutes, the guns come out and the truth starts to gush alongside the blood and the gore and the brains. The Hateful Eight is a murder mystery where everyone is guilty, where each character is emblematic of the rot festering in post-Civil War America and, by natural extension, America in the year 2015. Despite their varied backgrounds, everyone in this sordid tale is a foul, loathsome villain, a symptom of the darkness no one wants to talk about. This is a mean movie, a bucket of icy water in the face after the catharsis of DjangoThe Hateful Eight takes its time, and indulges in its own tangents. It doesn’t like you and it doesn’t care if you like it. That’s aggressive and brave and suicidal and ridiculous and, well, that’s Tarantino.

5.Creed

Defying conventional wisdom about diminishing returns, this holiday season will see the release of the seventh installment in an iconic 1970s film franchise that not only lives up to the best of its predecessors, but also respectfully forges its own path. (Hopefully the new “Star Wars” movie is good, too.) With his “Rocky” spinoff, “Creed,” writer-director Ryan Cooglerconfirms every bit of promise he displayed in his 2013 debut, “Fruitvale Station,” offering a smart, kinetic, exhilaratingly well-crafted piece of mainstream filmmaking, and providing actorMichael B. Jordan with yet another substantial stepping stone on his climb to stardom. Yet the biggest surprise may be Sylvester Stallone: Appearing in the first “Rocky” film that he didn’t also write — and the first in which he takes on a supporting role — the veteran channels all his obvious love for the character into his performance, digging deeper as an actor than he has in years. Despite some heavyweight competition over Thanksgiving weekend, “Creed” should still be a contender at the box office.

4.Bridge Of Spies

It’s no small feat turning a shyster and an enemy spy into national heroes, but that’s the unique achievement of Steven Spielberg’s “Bridge of Spies.” If Jimmy Stewart were alive today, the director surely would have asked him to play James Donovan, a noble New York insurance lawyer roped into providing an alleged Soviet agent with pro-bono legal representation, who later goes on to broker his exchange for two Americans held captive by Commies. Failing that, he’d done one better and cast honorary Boy Scout and all-around good guy Tom Hanks in the role, transforming a potential indictment of patriotic hypocrisy and Cold War subterfuge into a riveting, feel-good time for the whole family (two instances of the “F-word” notwithstanding), putting it on track to top “War Horse.”

3. The Revenant

DiCaprio's performance is an astonishing testament to his commitment to a role. That's really him plunging into that river. That's him staggering half-naked through the teeth-chattering cold. That's him grabbing a fish out of icy waters and eating it raw.

2. The Big Short

No nation has a corner on the cupidity, duplicity, stupidity and willful blindness that fueled the subprime mortgage bubble of the mid-2000s. Only in America, though, could filmmakers illuminate such a dire subject, and the financial debacle that ensued, with the sort of scathing wit, joyous irreverence and brilliant boisterousness that make “The Big Short” an improbable triumph.

1. The Martian

His space crew abandons astronaut Matt Damon on Mars. The Golden Globes think it's a comedy. I think it's an exuberant take on the science of the unknown and a chance to celebrate the vibrant, virtuoso talent of director Ridley Scott. Indeed, the best movie of 2015 . This film really deserves an Oscar.

Wednesday 27 January 2016

Damn ! What a Bicycle Kick !

No doubt, this is the most amazing bicycle kick I have ever seen ! I assure you, This guy has got one heck of a talent !

Human Fucking Beings !

Unfortunately, Sweepers are more educated than us !
We throw garbage on the roads, they throw it in the dust bin.

Thursday 21 January 2016

Major Oscar Predictions & Nominations


Best Actor : Leonardo DiCaprio

DiCaprio's performance is an astonishing testament to his commitment to a role. That's really him plunging into that river. That's him staggering half-naked through the teeth-chattering cold. That's him grabbing a fish out of icy waters and eating it raw.
He should have won Oscar for Blood Diamond and Wolf Of Wall street but it looks like, this time he is gonna catch the big fish as he has already won critic's choice award for Best acting.

Best Director : Adam Mckay

Only this Director could illuminate such a dire subject, and the financial debacle that ensued, with the sort of scathing wit, joyous irreverence and brilliant boisterousness that make “The Big Short” an improbable triumph.

Best Picture : The Martian

The Martian, with a you-are-there script by Drew Goddard, works you over without a hint of dystopian doom in all of its bracing 142 minutes. This suspenseful survival tale, smartass to its core, slaps a smile on your face that you'll wear all the way home.You won't find a space epic that's more fun to geek out at than The Martian.

Best Actress : Brie Larson


Brie Larson as Ma really stuns as she both embodies deep strength and stunning vulnerability, acting as both a protector of her young child and still a relatively young girl herself thrust into a horrifying situation. Though Larson is the MVP, supporting performances from Tremblay and Joan Allen as Larson's mother are also great, plus Stephen Remnick's score and Danny Cohen's dark, yet warm cinematography stand out as well.

Generation of Idiots

I fear that day when the technology will surpass our human interactions. The world will have a generation of idiots.
                                                   - Albert Einstein
Yes ! Yes ! We are a generation of idiots. We live in a world where there is chaos and anarchy everywhere. Blood is being shed everywhere, people are being ripped apart,countries are falling apart, fantasies are being given more importance than relationships.We have forgotten our moral values,culture,traditions.We are nothing more than lethargic imbeciles sitting around like ducks all day with electronic gadgets in our hand and just wasting time and money. We have thrown ourselves into a very deep pit from where this is no turning back.
It takes heart to say this but Einstein was right. "We are indeed the generation of idiots".

Wednesday 6 January 2016

Some Bitter Realities

- The world's hunger is getting ridiculous; there is more fruit in a rich man's shampoo than in a poor man's plate.
- Unfortunately,we live in a world where they got money for war but no money to feed the hungry ones.
- Unfortunately, we live in a society where pizza arrives before the police.
- If doctors are paid the same salary as bus drivers, the society would not be crazy about making their children doctors.
- Unfortunately, we live in a society where parents wake their children for school but not for Fajr prayers.

Monday 4 January 2016

Muslims ! Time to unite

The time has come for Muslims to stand up against Indian Violence (director of many vulgar films like  (Jism 2)
Sorry to say but it is a moment of shame for us that a person who belongs to a Hindu religion and has a low character is standing against his own country for our rights and is urging us to become united . We have heard and read many things especially in our books regarding spirit and zeal of the Muslims that "If Muslims wake up any time from their hibernation, nobody would be able to stand up against them" ; but to me , it seems that it won't ever happen because the entire Muslim Ummah has fallen into a very deep pit from where there is no turning back .
‪#‎TimeToUnite‬

Sunday 3 January 2016

San Bernardino Attacks : A complete Hoax

 
We should think twice before blaming any religion or person in particular. These San Bernardino attacks were just a complete hoax as was 9/11 , WMDs , Killing Of Osama , etc.
Islam does not promote Terrorism, It is a religion of peace and brotherhood.
#sanbernardinoshooting   #falseflag  

Importance of Footpaths

You can judge a country's nature by the way its people make use of the footpath ;
- If they walk on it, the country is on the right path.
- If they walk on the roads rather than footpaths, the country needs education.
- If they use bikes or cycles on footpaths to avoid traffic, they lack manners and will eventually fall like a pack of cards.