ardha nArISvarA, rectangles of light-
outside the wind howls
musings on life, movies, food, words ...
yesterday, i watched alain resnais' masterpiece of a movie, his first feature film- a love story set in the most unlikely of places- hi-ro-shi-ma. as the movie progresses, we understand that it is a perfect place to fall in love, especially of the hopeless, doomed kind and any personal tragedy is outshadowed by the tragedy that befell the city in 1945, one that continues to exist despite the city having been resurrected. the opening shot of the arms of entwined lovers covered with a layer of ash that continues to fall slowly and softly like snow finally gives way to a documentary like walk through the events of hiroshima narrated by the film's unnamed heroine. we are shown impassive faces in spotlessly clean hospitals, legs of zombie like hordes of japanese people walking the aisles of a museum and viewing almost surreal objects (a bicycle melted into a pretzel, a bouquet of caps), images of horror- of peeled skin and vaporized bodies and mutilated faces and also signs of life- ants and earthworms crawling out of the earth on day 2. alain was asked to originally make a documentary but after having watched the ones the japanese had made commented that there was nothing left for him to make and asked marguerite duras to write a script with a love story set in hiroshima, a script he would strictly adhere to. in many ways, hiroshima mon amour is a story about remembrance and forgetting, of the unraveling of time, of transference and of catharsis. along with rashomon and citizen kane, it brilliantly uses flashbacks (something which is so obvious and banal today but was relatively uncommon then) to reconstruct the heroine's past which we learn was another tragic love story, l'amour premiere, that most powerful of loves, to a german officer who is killed by a sniper minutes before they meet and dies in her arms.
i walked back home around 6 yesterday. the sun had just set but there was still a lot of light and the sky was a rosy pink and there she was in the midst of urban ugliness- power lines, smoke stacks and concrete- but untouched by the grime, noise, and man-made civilization. she kept me company as i walked home, playing peekaboo with me around trees and chimneys.
petrichor is a coinage for the most wondrous of smells- the smell of rain on earth, the smell of red earth and pouring rain. often claimed by many as their most favourite smell, it is supposedly a complex odour created by more than 50 chemicals with redolent names like geosmin. 




the clash between old and new, paleolithic and computer age, black and white, pastoral and nomadic are millenia-old and controversial and prone to polemics. this compelling film (which could easily be mistaken for a documentary if not for direct conversation and some herzogian touches almost bordering on the absurd) covers the clash between aboriginals and a (white) mining company over a land the aboriginals hold sacred- the place where the green ants dream. in the voice over, Herzog claims he made up the green ant dreamtime but in reality such a thing (not sure if it is green) exists but elsewhere in NE Australia. Based on an early legal battle which was ongoing when Herzog was visiting Australia between an opal mining company and aboriginal people of Central Australia, the movie is filled with beautiful, stark and sometimes bizarre imagery starting from an almost eerie, speckled movie of a tornado shot in Oklahoma which strangely enough sets the tone for this very quiet movie. The aboriginals lose the case but the sympathetic judge laments that he is merely following the law of the land even though it is not very fair to the aboriginal people. Later cases were apparently overwhelmingly in favour of the aboriginal people. There are classical Herzogian touches and images- the poignant scene where the 'mute' goes up to the witness box and speaks in a language which no one can translate as he is the sole surviving speaker, the rest of his tribe having died out, reminiscent of the melancholic beauty of Ray Bradbury's short story The Foghorn; the courtroom scene where the two watches worn by the tribe elder goes off; the harrowed search for Mrs Strelow's dog lost in the underground mine chambers; the two elders (mala-mata pair?) sitting in the airplane which is green and almost insect like staring at the East where the green ants fly to; the final scene where the geologist decides to quit mainstream life and science and go live in the outback and walks amidst conical piles of earth dug by the opal boring drills. Oh and there are snatches of a South American futbol commentator orgasming like a fire engine siren on a goal (Argentina scored i believe) played out on a radio, something Herzog claims he listens to whenever he is disturbed !! And there are a couple of mesmerising didgeridoo tracks played by the elder himself.