Monday, December 1, 2014

Sometimes trying to prove a point is very expensive!!

Proving a Point !!

watch the hillarious video and decide for your self

Friday, August 20, 2010

A thought to be thought ............ would you share......

 
 

Thursday, July 8, 2010

HAPPINESS @ LIFE

Interactive Coaching worshop a unique forum to explore and regain your happiess, a personalised process of assisting individuals, to identify and tap their dormant skills and capabilities (inner potential), and enabling them to use the capabilities for the desired positive transformation - and by that increasing the self reliace of the individual, reducing reliace on external help/ intervention" for personal empowerment and excellence.
The workshop is only for those who are seriously willing to involve, interact,explore and express their personal potential itha spirit of collective contribution. Those who are seriously seking to regain and retain Happiness in LIFE.
This isan interactive forum that follows the contemporary coachig mode.
The success of the workshopdepends solely on the concious involvement levels of the participants.
contact : +91 - 9676000600.
limited number of partcipants -20.
time - 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Venue: Odyssey; Jubilee Hills.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

movie: air bender

Shyamalan’s ‘Airbender’ has some good elements



By Scott Bowles, USA TODAY
He hasn’t mastered the craft yet, but M. Night Shyamalan may be on to something with this action-movie thing.
His first film in this genre, The Last Airbender, shows glimpses of the brash director behind chillers like The Sixth Sense and Signs, movies that prompted Newsweek to declare him “the next Spielberg.”
Since then, though, his forays into suspense have seen diminishing critical and financial returns. Lady in the Water tanked at the box office, and The Happening was an odd film, even for the eclectic Shyamalan, about a virus, embodied by the wind, that prompted folks to want to end it all. Some critics even said the film also gave them the affliction.
‘THE LAST AIRBENDER’:
But here it’s clear Shyamalan is working from a passion that frequently fuels his movies: parenting. The director, 39, used to watch the Nickelodeon animated show Avatar: The Last Airbender
with his 7-year-old son, and he persuaded Paramount to make a big-screen rendition about the adventures of a child, Aang (played by newcomer Noah Ringer), who can control the natural elements.
Shyamalan gives the film a darker tone, though not one that should put off fans of the cartoon, which in its heyday drew more than 5 million kids an episode during its run from 2005 to 2008.
Aang, we’re told, is an Avatar, a rare being who can control the elements and bring harmony to the clashing nations of Fire, Water, Earth and Air.
Yeah, it’s kid stuff, and parents aren’t going to be enjoying any Pixar-style dual themes. This is strictly for the preteens who like their heroes young, their morals simple and their villains clear.
And Shyamalan delivers. Credit the director for emphasizing the film’s multiple fight scenes, which crackle, particularly for a kids’ movie. This could have played like Spy Kids Know Kung Fu, but Ringer is a real martial arts prodigy, and co-star Dev Patel (Slumdog Millionaire) trained for months. It shows.
The film has come under fire from some Asian-American groups for not using more Asian stars. Ringer is white, while the cartoon characters were Asian.
Airbender’s problem, though, is not in race. It’s in the script, written by Shyamalan. It can sound wooden, particularly when he calls on an inexperienced Ringer to deliver soliloquies to incite rebellion.
And for a first film, Airbender seems oddly set up for a sequel, particularly considering it’s going to get its brains bashed in at the box office by The Twilight Saga: Eclipse, also out this weekend.
But for a kids’ movie, Airbender delivers on multiple levels. And if the series does continue, Shyamalan may find action a lot less frightening than the reaction to his horror of late.