Saturday, May 30, 2009

Datta...as always 80% funny, 20% senseless..

Jay,
Let's deal one at a time,
1. You got an internship at ########, so I learn from your email id.Also suggestive that you are in ##### and are intern ##.
2. Menelaus as you would have noticed throughout the film Troy (2004),exhibits an indomitable urge of shouting at people's faces, particularly if the recipient is a male. The associated literature of ancient fictional works, Troy in our case, depicts hints of confused sexuality. Referring to the cliché “the actor has to step into to the character heis playing"- Thus the hypothesis can be deduced - Brendon Gleeson isn’t utterly heterosexual (in a simpler term Ol' Brendon loves the pole...also aka ass pirate).
3. The moral dilemma presented in the film is contingent to the events running up to the hypothetical "Kill". To save yourself, yes, To save others, yes again. (Feeding yourself is well within the ambits of saving yourself from the global threat called hunger)However the physical act of killing, as outrageous as it may appear, can be strikingly different from the metaphor "kill". eg- "Ufff maar hidaloge" , "Maar dala" (Devdas, 2002)Subscribers of the re-birth theory would suggest that killing is an average action, almost inconsequential(ref- AKS,2001 "na koi marta hai nakoi maarta hai...mai nahi keheta tumhare geeta me likha hai"), like brushing your teeth, because you'd be popping out screaming your lungs out in the next clinic around the corner. This however has further implications on abortion rules, that of course is a different point ofcontention.
4. Meat is, in its meaning and sense synonymous to flesh, and hence the satisfaction derived from each. Hypocrites can take a walk, Yes I would give up my life for my faith in carnal pleasures; beef/lamb/goat or otherwise. (PS: lean meat often comes with a strong flavour of cosmetics/mascara)5. And this doesn’t necessitate me to add a point, however will mention for the sake of solemnity; a well construed introspection on matters of profound philosophy requires an equivalent question. Thanks for triggering the thought.Yours truly,

No comments: