After a lazy sunday afternoon nap, we decided to watch the film Syriana. I was still a bit sleepy and I had been hoping for something not too complicated, so probably some bits of Syriana passed over my head without registering.
The film is complicated with different simultaneous and parallel story lines spread over different continents and in different languages, English, Farsi, Arabic and Urdu. The main aim of the film is to show how American multinationals involved in petrol extraction with active support from different American institutions, are willing to go to any length to keep on their profits, including the assassination of those who try to fight against their power. At the same time, short term thinking/planning of USA forces sometimes provide sophisticated weapons to those who later use them against American interests.
I was thinking of how so many Indian films are now equally vehement in showing nexus between corrupt politicians, underworld and other corrupted state institutions.
It is a victory of freedom of press if cinema can show such realities in such clear terms, pointing accusing fingers at the powers.
Yet, I was also thinking about the fact that many such films have come, their accusations seem believable, and yet nothing changes in this world. Voters go on electing those same persons, those persons keep on doing what they were doing and public does not care. Then periodically, there are some "ritualistic cleaning" in which some power-brokers are sacrificed to satisfy the public hunger for justice, and everything continues as before. It sounds very horrible and cynical and yet probably an accurate description of how "real" life is.
Coming back to Syriana, George Clooney must be passing though that "I am not just a beautiful body, I am a good actor" phase. His character in the film is not very believable - his perplexity and confusion in the film when he understands how his Government operates, after being a secret agent for all his life in places like Beirut, is not credible. The decision of Pakistani boys to be the suicide bombers is also not explained properly in the film, since at least one of them seems not convinced about religious dope peddled by his instructors.
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The film is complicated with different simultaneous and parallel story lines spread over different continents and in different languages, English, Farsi, Arabic and Urdu. The main aim of the film is to show how American multinationals involved in petrol extraction with active support from different American institutions, are willing to go to any length to keep on their profits, including the assassination of those who try to fight against their power. At the same time, short term thinking/planning of USA forces sometimes provide sophisticated weapons to those who later use them against American interests.
I was thinking of how so many Indian films are now equally vehement in showing nexus between corrupt politicians, underworld and other corrupted state institutions.
It is a victory of freedom of press if cinema can show such realities in such clear terms, pointing accusing fingers at the powers.
Yet, I was also thinking about the fact that many such films have come, their accusations seem believable, and yet nothing changes in this world. Voters go on electing those same persons, those persons keep on doing what they were doing and public does not care. Then periodically, there are some "ritualistic cleaning" in which some power-brokers are sacrificed to satisfy the public hunger for justice, and everything continues as before. It sounds very horrible and cynical and yet probably an accurate description of how "real" life is.
Coming back to Syriana, George Clooney must be passing though that "I am not just a beautiful body, I am a good actor" phase. His character in the film is not very believable - his perplexity and confusion in the film when he understands how his Government operates, after being a secret agent for all his life in places like Beirut, is not credible. The decision of Pakistani boys to be the suicide bombers is also not explained properly in the film, since at least one of them seems not convinced about religious dope peddled by his instructors.
***