November 17, 2009

Sachin Tendulkar on the highest points in his extraordinary career

1. The first time I put on my India cap
It was a great moment for me. If I am not mistaken, Chandu Borde, our team manager, handed me my cap. But there was no presentation ceremony like they have today.

2. My first Test hundred
It came at Old Trafford in 1990. Manoj Prabhakar helped me with some determined batting at the other end. I was not at all surprised by what he did that day because I had played with him earlier and I knew that he was a terrific competitor. We prevented England from winning.

3. The counter-attacking 114 at Perth
This ton is a favourite of mine. Australia had four quick bowlers (Craig McDermott, Merv Hughes, Mike Whitney and Paul Reiffel) but I thought McDermott was the most challenging to face in Perth. Throughout the series he was their main bowler.

4. Bowling the last over against SA in the 1993 Hero Cup
South Africa needed six runs to win in the last over. There was no plan for me to bowl that over but I said I was very confident of bowling it successfully. I conceded just three and we won.

5. 82 (off 49 balls) against NZ as opener in 1994
I was the vice-captain then and our regular opener Navjot Singh Sidhu woke up with a stiff neck. I requested Azhar (Mohammad Azharuddin) and Ajit Wadekar (coach) to "just give me one opportunity and I am very confident of playing some big shots. And if I fail, I'll never ever come to you again".

6. Winning the Titan Cup in 1996
South Africa were playing terrific cricket right through the tournament. We adopted a different strategy. As captain I chose to have five fielders on the on side. I told Robin Singh not to bowl seam but cutters into the body and make them score everything on the on side. Maybe that came as a surprise for them.. This was one low-scoring game that I can never forget.

7. 1997 Sahara Cup win over Pakistan
We were without our top three bowlers for this tournament, which I led India in. We were without Javagal Srinath, Venkatesh Prasad and Anil Kumble, but we had Abey Kuruvilla, Harvinder Singh, Debasish Mohanty and Nilesh Kulkarni as newcomers. It was a fantastic effort and we beat Pakistan 4-1. Incredible!

8. Scoring 155 against Australia in the 1998 Chennai Test
I thought getting used to that angle from Shane Warne was important. Before the Test I not only practiced with Laxman Sivaramakrishnan but Nilesh Kulkarni and Sairaj Bahutule in Mumbai too. They gave me a lot of practice. I clearly remember saying to my friends after I scored a double hundred for Mumbai against Australia that Warne has not bowled a single ball round the wicket and I know that he will do it in the Test series.

9. 1998's sandstorm hundred in Sharjah against Australia
The first of the two back-to-back hundreds in Sharjah, 1998. Tendulkar highlighted the similarities between his Sharjah efforts and the two special knocks in the 2008 tri-series finals in Australia in terms of how small a gap there was between the two matches of each of these series, which made it so difficult on the body.

Shane Warne greets Sachin Tendulkar after India's victory in the final, Australia v India, Sharjah, April 24, 1998
Shane Warne greets Tendulkar after India's victory in the Sharjah final © AFP

10. Meeting Don Bradman in Adelaide
Without doubt, the most riveting moment in my off-field career. The trip to Adelaide in 1998 with Shane Warne was truly special and to meet him on his 90th birthday made it even more memorable. It was great to spend 45 minutes to an hour talking cricket with him.

11. Beating England at Leeds, 2002
Sanjay Bangar played beautifully for his 68 and he put on a good partnership with Rahul Dravid, who played superbly. I remember going to bat after tea and Andrew Flintoff was bowling a lot of short-pitched stuff round the wicket. I moved pretty well the next day and I remember leaving deliveries off Matthew Hoggard, who bowled a few overs outside the off stump. I paced my innings well (193) and went past Sir Don's tally of 29 Test hundreds.

12. Match-winning 98 against Pakistan in the 2003 World Cup
There was that six off Shoaib (Akhtar) but there were other shots which I felt good about in that match. I was playing with a finger injury and the finger wouldn't straighten. I avoided fielding practice through the tournament because I was experiencing a lot of pain while catching. I gave fielding practice though.

13. First series win in Pakistan, 2003-04
Undoubtedly one of the top series wins in my career. Remember, Pakistan had a good side and we went there and won convincingly.

14. 35th Test hundred, v Sri Lanka in Delhi, 2005
There was this pressure which was building up to go past Sunil Gavaskar in the Test century tally. The room service and housekeeping people in my hotel only spoke about me getting century No 35. I was glad and relieved when it happened because I could then start enjoying the game again.

15. Beating England in Nottingham in 2007
We have always managed to come back well after a defeat or saving a match. This is a classic example. We escaped defeat in the opening Test at Lord's but came back to win in Trent Bridge.

16. Beating Australia in Perth in 2008
We were determined to win this Test after what happened in Sydney. We shouldn't have lost in Sydney considering we were in a good position on the first day, but then the world has seen what happened (referring to the umpiring).

17. The CB Series triumph in Australia in 2008
Not only India, but all other sides found Australia too hard to beat. My hundred in the first final at Sydney was satisfying but the second match in Brisbane was tough. We went to bed at 3 am in Sydney after a day-night game. I just could not sleep and woke up at 8 am to catch a morning flight. I was trying every possible thing to be fresh for the next day's match. The next day we won the toss and batted. It was quite humid so the conditions were tough. We knew that the first half hour was crucial. I thought even if I don't get runs quickly, it's fine because if we don't lose early wickets, the big strokeplayers can always capitalise on the start and that's what happened.

Sachin Tendulkar picks up a souvenir, India v England, 1st Test, Chennai, 5th day, December 15, 2008
Tendulkar picks up a souvenir after steering India to victory in Chennai, 2008 © AFP

18. Going past Brian Lara's Test run tally in Mohali, 2008
Becoming the highest run-getter in world cricket doesn't happen overnight. Lara is a special player and a guy who is a good friend. We respect each other immensely. To go past his tally meant that I have contributed something to cricket.

19. Second-innings Test hundred against England in Chennai, 2008
Awesome feeling to get that hundred, which I dedicated to the people of Mumbai. It was a very emotional time. It was important to stay there till the end and I remember telling my batting partner, Yuvraj Singh, that it's still not over so don't relax. I recalled that close game against Pakistan in 1999 when we lost by 12 runs.

20. 175 against Australia in Hyderabad, 2009
I know my body well and I know how much I can push so I was not surprised to score a 175 at the age of 36. Even if I had to complete those 20 runs by running them, I was absolutely fine. I was a few runs short of completing 17,000 ODI runs before the match, but that wasn't playing on my mind. However, every now and again it appeared on the scoreboard. That's not important to me. The important thing was to go out and win.

October 29, 2009

Facinated by Quotations

I have always been facinated by quotations. Some have made me think, some have made me laugh and some have made me wonder. Quotes have such profound effect on me and many like me.

I found this set hand written by me in a piece of paper stuck in one of my old books; may be written around 15 years back, I guess. Some of the quotes were not attributed to any and I googled them to attribute to the right person and I don't even know many of them.

I am only listing some of the quotations from this list.

"By being pleasant always and smiling, it takes you nearer to God, nearer than any prayer."
- Swami Vivekananda

"At times, it is better to keep your mouth shut and let people wonder if you're a fool than to open it and remove all doubt."
- James G. Sinclair

"Be your own judge and you will be truly happy"
- Mahatma Gandhi

"Helping Hands are better than Praying Lips"
- Mother Theresa

"Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less."
- Marie Curie

"Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things."
- Robert Brault

"The essence of knowledge is, having it, to apply it; not having it, to confess your ignorance."
- Confucius

"I value the friend who for me finds time on his calendar, but I cherish the friend who for me does not consult his calendar."
- Robert Brault

"We are all born into the world with nothing. Everything we acquire after that is profit."
- Sam Ewing

"Confidence, like art, never comes from having all the answers; it comes from being open to all the questions."
- Earl Gray Stevens

"The measure of a man's real character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out."
- Thomas B. Macauley

"The greatest pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do."
- Walter Gagehot

"He who controls others may be powerful, but he who has mastered himself is mightier still"
- Lao Tzu

"If today your abilities are small and your powers insignificant, begin now to make a more thorough use of them and they will grow."
- Raymond Holliwel

October 27, 2009

Top 50 movies since 2000 from IMDB.com

Top 50 movies since 2000 from IMDB.com (as on October 2009)

The ones bolded are the ones I haven't seen yet and non-English films have been given their English title in ALL CAPS:

  1. The Dark Knight (2008)
  2. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King(2003)
  3. CITY OF GOD (2002)
  4. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring(2001)
  5. Memento (2000)
  6. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)
  7. Up (2009)
  8. Inglourious Basterds (2009)
  9. WALL·E (2008)
  10. AMÉLIE (2001)
  11. THE LIVES OF OTHERS (2006)
  12. The Pianist (2002)
  13. SPIRITED AWAY (2001)
  14. The Departed (2006)
  15. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
  16. Requiem for a Dream (2000)
  17. PAN'S LABYRINTH (2006)
  18. DOWNFALL (2004)
  19. Slumdog Millionaire (2008)
  20. District 9 (2009)
  21. Gran Torino (2008)
  22. The Prestige (2006)
  23. Sin City (2005)
  24. Hotel Rwanda (2004)
  25. Batman Begins (2005)
  26. Oldboy (2003)
  27. No Country for Old Men (2007)
  28. Gladiator (2000)
  29. The Wrestler (2008)
  30. Star Trek (2009)
  31. There Will Be Blood (2007)
  32. Donnie Darko (2001)
  33. Into the Wild (2007)
  34. Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003)
  35. Zombieland (2009)
  36. Million Dollar Baby (2004)
  37. The Bourne Ultimatum (2007)
  38. Snatch. (2000)
  39. (500) Days of Summer (2009)
  40. Amores perros (2000)
  41. Where the Wild Things Are (2009)
  42. Finding Nemo (2003)
  43. Ratatouille (2007)
  44. V for Vendetta (2005)
  45. THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY (2007)
  46. The Incredibles (2004)
  47. THE TWILIGHT SAMURAI (2002)
  48. Children of Men (2006)
  49. In Bruges (2008)
  50. Letters from Iwo Jima (2006)

October 9, 2009

My Favorite 50 Tamil Films of the '80s & 90's

My Favorite 50 Tamil Films of the 1980s: (In alphabetical order)
  1. 47 Naatkal
  2. Aan Paavam
  3. Aboorva Sakothararkal
  4. Agni Natchathiram
  5. Alaigal Oivadhillai
  6. Andha 7 Naatkal
  7. Billa
  8. Dhoorathu Idi Muzhakkam
  9. Indru Poai Naalai Vaa
  10. Johnny
  11. Kann Simittum Neram
  12. Mister Bharath
  13. Moodu Pani
  14. Moondraam Pirai
  15. Mouna Raagam
  16. Mudhal Mariyaadhai
  17. Mudhal Vasantham
  18. Naayakan
  19. Nalai Manithan
  20. Nallavanukku Nallavan
  21. Nenjaththai Killaadhae
  22. Nettrikkann
  23. Nizhalkal
  24. Nooraavadhu Naal
  25. Oomai Vizhikal
  26. Oru Kaidhiyin Diary
  27. Oru Thalai Raagam
  28. Paalaivana Rojakkal
  29. Paasaparavaikal
  30. Padikkaathavan
  31. Pagal Nilavu
  32. Pesum Padam
  33. Poo Vizhi Vaasalilae
  34. Punnakai Mannan
  35. Puthiya Paadhai
  36. Rettai Vaal Kuruvi
  37. Sathya
  38. Sattam Oru Iruttarai
  39. Senthoorapoovae
  40. Simlaa Special
  41. Sindhu Bairavi
  42. Thanneer Thanneer
  43. Thendralae Ennai Thodu
  44. Thillu Mullu
  45. Vaideghi Kaathirundhaal
  46. Varumayin Niram Sivappu
  47. Varusham 16
  48. Veedu
  49. Vidiymvarai Kaathiru
  50. Vikram
My Favorite 50 Tamil Films of the 1990s: (In alphabetical order)
  1. Anjali
  2. Annaamalai
  3. Avvai Shanmugi
  4. Azhagan
  5. Baadshaa
  6. Captain Prabhakaran
  7. Chathriyan
  8. Dharma Durai
  9. En Vuyir Thozhan
  10. Gentleman
  11. Gopura Vaasalilae
  12. Gunaa
  13. Idhayam
  14. Indian
  15. Iruvar
  16. Kaadhal Desam
  17. Kaadhalaa Kaadhalaa
  18. Kaadhalukku Mariyaadhai
  19. Karuthammaa
  20. Keladi Kanmani
  21. Kizhakku Cheemayilae
  22. Kizhakku Vaasal
  23. Kuruthip Punal
  24. Love Today
  25. Magaa Nadhi
  26. Mannan
  27. Marumalarchi
  28. Marupadiyum
  29. Michael Madana Kaamarajan
  30. Mudhalvan
  31. Mugam
  32. Naadodi Thendral
  33. Nadigan
  34. Nammavar
  35. Padayappaa
  36. Pudhu Vasantham
  37. Pulan Visaaranai
  38. Puthiya Mugam
  39. Rojaa
  40. Sadhi Leelaavathi
  41. Sangamam
  42. Seevalaperi Paandi
  43. Sethu
  44. Terrorist
  45. Thalapathi
  46. Thevar Magan
  47. Thottaa Chinungi
  48. Vaali
  49. Vaanamae Ellai
  50. Valli

a short & sweet funny clip!

October 2, 2009

ICC World Test & ODI Teams, Awards for 2009

World Test Team 2009:
  1. Gautam Gambhir (India)
  2. Andrew Strauss (England)
  3. AB de Villiers (South Africa)
  4. Sachin Tendulkar (India)
  5. Thilan Samaraweera (Sri Lanka)
  6. Michael Clarke (Australia)
  7. MS Dhoni (India) Capt & Wk
  8. Shakib Al Hasan (Bangladesh)
  9. Mitchell Johnson (Australia)
  10. Stuart Broad (England)
  11. Dale Steyn (South Africa)
  12. Harbhajan Singh (India) 12th man
World ODI 2009:
  1. Virender Sehwag (Ind)
  2. Chris Gayle (WI)
  3. Kevin Pietersen (Eng)
  4. Tillakaratne Dilshan (SL)
  5. Yuvraj Singh (Ind)
  6. Martin Guptill (NZ)
  7. MS Dhoni (India) Capt & Wk
  8. Andrew Flintoff (Eng)
  9. Nuwan Kulasekara (SL)
  10. Ajantha Mendis (SL)
  11. Umar Gul (Pak)
  12. Thilan Thushara (SL) 12th man
Mitchell Johnson: ICC World Player of the Year

Gautam Gambhir: Test Player of the Year

Mahendra Singh Dhoni: ODI Player of the Year

Tillakaratne Dilshan: T20I Performance of the Year

Peter Siddle: Emerging Player of the Year

New Zealand: Spirit of Cricket award

July 16, 2009

அறை எண் 305ல் அபத்தம்

சமீபத்தில் சன் டிவியில் அறை எண் 305ல் கடவுள் பார்க்க நேர்ந்தது. சிறிது நேரத்திலேயே அதைப் பார்ப்பது நேர விரயம் எனப் புரிந்தது. சில காரணங்களால் தொடர்ந்து பார்த்தேன்.

சில காலமாகவே மீடியாக்களில் வரும் சில அபத்தங்கள் இப்படத்தில் சற்றே தூக்கலாக இருந்தது. அதுவும் இந்த சாப்ட்வேர் மக்களைப் பற்றியும் சாப்ட்வேர் கம்பெனிகளைப் பற்றியும் இது போன்ற அரை வேக்காட்டுத்தனமான விமர்சனங்கள் எதிர்ப்போரின்றி உலா வருகின்றன.

படத்தில் வரும் ஒரு சாப்ட்வேர் கம்பெனியின் பெயர் கொள்ளையோசிஸ். அதில் வேலை பார்ப்பவர்கள் அனைவர் விரல்களையும் சிறியதாக்குகிறார் நாயகன். அதோடு அவர்களை பிச்சை வேறு எடுக்கச் சொல்கிறார். காரணம் அவர்கள் அளவுக்கு அதிகமாக பணம் சம்பாதிக்கிறார்களாம். இது ராணுவ வீரர்கள் சம்பளத்தை விட அதிகமாம். அது முறையில்லையாம். அப்படியென்றால் சினிமா நாயக நாயகிகள் வாங்கும் சம்பளம் எப்படியாம்?

சாப்ட்வேர் காரானுக்கு கம்பெனியே வரியைப் பிடித்துக்கொண்டு மீதியை கொடுக்கிறது. சினிமாகாரர்களுக்கு எப்படி? அதை வேறு விளக்க வேண்டுமா? கறுப்புப் பணம் பற்றி பெரிதாகப் பேசிய சிவாஜி படத்திலேயே சினிமாவில் உலாவும் கறுப்பு காணாமல் போனதே!

அரசு ஊழியர்கள் மட்டும் தான் வரி கட்டி நாட்டையே தாங்குகிறார்களாம். சாப்ட்வேர் மக்களும் சாப்ட்வேர் கம்பனிகளும் வரி கட்டாமல் சுவிஸ் பேங்கிலா பணத்தைப் போட்டு வைக்கிறார்கள்?

சினிமாவில் நடிக்க ரஜினிகாந்த் வாங்கும் கோடிகளும் சாப்ட்வேர் மக்கள் சம்பாதிக்கும் லட்சங்களும் நேர் வழியில் வருபவை. ஊழல் செய்தோ ஊரை ஏமாற்றியோ வருவதல்ல. இனி வரும் காலங்களில் இது போன்ற அபத்தக் கருத்துகளைப் பரப்பாமல் படங்கள் வரும் என நம்புவோம்!

June 15, 2009

Whats wrong with Dhoni?

Before talking about Dhoni's bizarre tactics against England and in the IPL, lets see some stats in T20Is:

PlayerSixesInnings6's per innings
Yuvraj29132.23
Yusuf971.29
Sehwag10110.91
Raina670.86
Rohit8100.80
Gambhir8150.53
Dhoni5160.31

These are the stats of the seven Indian batsmen in their international T20 career and as you can see it is sorted by the no of sixers hit in an innings. And look who is at the bottom of the list. Our Captain Cool.

When Dhoni promoted himself up in the order during the last edition of T20 WC, it made sense. That time we didnt had Sachin, Sourav, Rahul and Laxman in the team (whether they were good for T20 or not is not the point here, we lacked experience is what I am trying to say). With the exception of Veeru and Yuvi, rest of the batting was unknown. We had an unreliable Gambhir, untested Rohit and Yusuf played only in the final. For that matter Dinesh Karthik was preferred as a middle order batsman. Dhoni's tactics of not playing big shots was also perfectly justified at that time, as we needed some one to play thru the 20 overs.

But look at the team now after having seen how these fellows played in the IPL in South Africa. Under this scenario we cannot understand why Dhoni would bat above Yuvi or Yusuf and why he would send some one like Jadeja ahead of Yuvi. It also does not make any sense for Dhoni to bat above 5 or 6.

I think he is getting insecured with the two "seniors" Yuvi and Veeru after getting rid of practically all other seniors from the team. We are seeing a new Ganguly in the making. While Ganguly turned around the Indian team's fortunes, his playing politics with the players could not be forgotten or forgiven. Promoting a middle order batsman Veeru to open the batting to check Sachin is something I can never forget. Today Dhoni is doing the same thing with another middle order batter Rohit to put a check to Veeru.

It is quite visible that he prefers certain players over others. For example, Dhoni favours Ishant over RP. I feel RP is better for T20 than Ishant and Ishant is better than RP for tests. Same way with he prefers Raina over Yusuf.

Here are some facts that Dhoni can ponder:
  • Sachin is a better batsman, while Saurav is a better captain.
  • Dhoni is a better captain, while Yuvraj is one of the best limited overs player for India.
  • Dhoni should take a leaf out of Steve Waugh. Both these are not great players by any means, but both great fighters.

June 1, 2009

IPL 2009 Dream Teams

THIS is AFP’s Indian Premier League's "dream team" after the 59-match, five-week IPL ended at the Wanderers with Deccan Chargers beating Royal Challengers Bangalore by six runs in the final.

  1. Matthew Hayden (Chennai Super Kings)
  2. Adam Gilchrist (Deccan Chargers, wkt/capt)
  3. Suresh Raina (Chennai Super Kings)
  4. AB de Villiers (Delhi Daredevils)
  5. Tillakaratne Dilshan (Delhi Daredevils)
  6. Jean-Paul Duminy (Mumbai Indians)
  7. Anil Kumble (Bangalore Royal Challengers)
  8. Pragyan Ojha (Deccan Chargers)
  9. Rudra Pratap Singh (Deccan Chargers)
  10. Ashish Nehra (Delhi Daredevils)
  11. Lasith Malinga (Mumbai Indians)

February 23, 2009

Jayaho Slumdog



There have been lot of hype & hoppla surrounding Slumdog Millionaire and there have also been lot of jealousy in the Indian film fraternity about its success, there had been some protests by the slum dwellers to the name containing "dog" and the usual story of selling Indian poverty to the world.

I am really not going to talk about all this. In terms of the craft of film making Slumdog Millionaire is a good film and that is the reason why it went to win 8 Oscars today. It is not really important for a viewer to accept the theme of a movie or any art form for that matter, to appreciate that.

Personally I am not a big fan of the man Gandhi, but a big fan of the film Gandhi. I am not a religious person, but I am a big fan of the old TV serial Mahabarat. So I hope you get the point.

Same is the case with Slumdog Millionaire also. I may not agree with many of the things portrayed in the film, but i liked it as a film.

When our Tamil and Hindi film pundits talk about their Oscar dreams here is a man AR Rahman who quitely goes there and wins two Oscars and has the guts to say the phrase "Ella Pughazhum Iraivanukkae" in Tamil in the world stage. Kudos to this man for keeping his feet on the ground, even when he is flying!

I am also not a big fan AR Rahman's background score in most of the Indian movies. I feel Roja's score is still his best background score in Indian movies till date and thats not a good news as it came 17 years back in his first movie. However, I should confess that I am a fan of his songs and I feel that is his strength than the BGM.

Today is however a very important day in the history of Indian Cinema, similar to the day when Abhinav Bindra won the Olympic Gold.

After all, we have just had two earlier Oscar winners from India:

1982: Costume Design - John Mollo, Bhanu Athaiya - Gandhi
1991: Honorary Award - Satyajit Ray

Today we have 3 Oscars:

Best Sound Mixing: Ian Tapp, Richard Pryke and Resul Pookutty
Best Original Score: AR Rahman
Best Song: "Jai Ho", Music by AR Rahman, Lyric by Gulzar

And for those in Chennai hoping to win the oscars for the best picture and best actor, grow up folks. They dont give that for Tamil movies. You can either make your movies in English or try for the best foreign language film category.

A few things about the Tamil movies and the Oscars: if we make movies of Oscar class and style, we wont have audience for that here. You should compare the crowds of a Jackie Chan movie with those of Schindler's List or the crowd we get for Transporter or Snakes on a Plane. So there is no point in aiming for an Oscar.

We can aim to tell stories professionally and lift the levels of the audience to the next level with a few movies every year. It is happening in the hindi cinema, and it is high time that it happens in the tamil cinema as well.

If you look at the list of India's official entries at the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, you can get an idea about where we are:

1957: Mother India
1962: Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam
1969: Deiva Magan (Tamil)
1971: Reshma Aur Shera
1972: Uphaar
1973: Saudagar
1974: Hot Winds
1977: Manthan
1978: The Chess Players
1980: Payal Ki Jhankaar
1984: Saaransh
1985: Saagar
1986: Swathi Muthyam (Telugu)
1987: Nayagan (Tamil)
1988: Salaam Bombay!
1989: Parinda
1990: Anjali (Tamil)
1991: Henna
1992: Thevar Magan (Tamil)
1993: Rudaali
1994: Bandit Queen
1995: Kuruthipunal (Tamil)
1996: Indian (Tamil)
1997: Guru (Malayalam)
1998: Jeans (Tamil)
1999: Earth
2000: Hey Ram (Tamil)
2001: Lagaan
2002: Devdas
2004: Shwaas (Marathi)
2005: Paheli
2006: Rang De Basanti
2007: Eklavya - The Royal Guard
2008: Taare Zameen Par

You can see some ridiculous choices like Saagar, Henna, Jeans and Devdas. Come on: Jean for Oscar. The Academy should have sued the producers for wasting their time. I havent seen Taare Zameen Par, but Dasvidania could have been a better choice. Last year Paruththi Veeran could have been sent instead of the melodramatic and funny Eklavya.

In this list only the 3 made it to the nominations:

1957: Mother India
1988: Salaam Bombay!
2001: Lagaan

January 5, 2009

Best Movies of 2008

Obviously I can only list the best movies from what I have seen and as I am not a movie critic i don't get to see all the movies that release (wouldn't it be great to get paid to watch movies).

My top 5 Hollywood flicks of 2008:
  1. WALL·E
  2. Iron Man
  3. The Dark Knight
  4. Kung Fu Panda
  5. Mamma Mia!
My top 5 Tamil films of 2008:
  1. Subramaniapuram
  2. Anjaathey
  3. Bheema
  4. Yaaradi Nee Mohini
  5. Santhosh Subramaniam

Guardian's Test XI of 2008

Former England spinner Vic Marks prepared the list of his best test team of 2008.

"This is brilliant; we do not really know which is the best team in the world. For a decade, it has been Australia and there has been nothing to argue about. Now there are three contenders as India and South Africa challenge Australia's supremacy," said Marks.

"Pick the best XI from these four sides (apologies to Sri Lanka, Pakistan, West Indies and New Zealand for being so exclusive) and it is possible, without too much mischief, not to select a single Australian. This may be an indication of the way things are going," he added.

Here is the team:
  1. Grame Smith (c)
  2. Virender Sehwag
  3. Kevin Pietersen
  4. Sachin Tendulkar
  5. A B De Villiers
  6. Andrew Flintoff
  7. Mahendra Singh Dhoni
  8. Harbhajan Singh
  9. Zaheer Khan
  10. Ishant Sharma
  11. Dale Steyn