Friday, November 15, 2019

Manto Ke Afsane



Saadat Hasan Manto was an Indo-Pakistani playwright, author, and novelist who was known for his non-conventional writing style. His creations are magical words to the ardent readers of the Urdu language. In his short-lived life of 42 years, he has produced over 22 collections of short stories, three collections of essays, five series of radio plays, two groups of personal sketches, a novel, and also a chunk of film scripts. His finest of short stories were held in high regard that not only brought him success but also put him behind bars.. He was a man who dared to talk about societal issues and hard truths that no one dared to do and created awareness regarding them through his words and creations. He was painfully affected by the partition of India and vehemently opposed it. Most of his short stories and plays are based on the atrocities and molestation faced by the countrymen, especially by women and children in the days preceding the fateful announcement of the partition. His graphic and realistic portrayal of societal issues cemented his reputation to being one of the finest Urdu writers of the 20th century. 

**Childhood & Early Life
Sadat Hasan Manto was born on 11 May 1912, in a Muslim family, in Paproudi village of Samrala, in the Ludhiana district of the Punjab, to Sardar Begum and Ghulam Hasan Manto.His father was a judge in the local court

**Career
In 1933, , Mantocame across Abdul Bari Alig, a polemic writer, and scholar in Amritsar that changed his life forever. Abdul Bari Alig’s mentorship advocated Manto to know his true self and bring out his inner talent. Abdul encouraged him to read French and Russian literature. From there on, Manto was inspired by writers such as Chekhov, Maxim Gorky, Victor Hugo and Anton.
It was only within the matter of a month that Manto produced his first-ever Urdu translation, Victor Hugo’s ‘The Last Day of a Condemned Man’. The Urdu Book Stall, Lahore published it as ‘Sarguzasht-e-Aseer’ (A Prisoner's Story). Doing so, he realized his inclination, and then on started working in Masawat, a publishing house based in Ludhiana. 
From 1934, he started attending Aligarh Muslim University that took his life in a new direction. Following that, he joined the Indian Progressive Writers Association (IPWA). He met with the writer Ali Safdar Jafri who bolstered his interest in literature and acclaimed his writing. 
He wrote his second story, ‘Inqlaab Pasand’, which was published in the Aligarh Magazine in March 1935. 
In 1934, he came to Bombay and started writing for magazines, newspapers, and scripts for the then Hindi film industry. He resided in Foras Lane, in the very centre of Bombay’s red light district of Kamathipura. His surroundings profoundly impacted his writings. 
In early 1940, he accepted the job offer of writing for Urdu service in All India Radio. This was a golden period in his career, as it was proved to be quite rewarding to him. It was during this  time, that he composed over four collections of radio plays, ‘Teen Auratein’ (Three Women), ‘Janaze’ (Funerals), ‘Manto Ke Drame’ (Manto’s Dramas) and ‘Aao’(Come).
Alongside, he also continued with his composition of short stories and completed his next collection, ‘Dhuan ( Smoke), followed by the title ‘Manto Ke Afsane’ and his first topical essay collection, ‘Manto Ke Mazamin’. 
Meanwhile, due to difference of opinion with the director of the All India Radio, poet N.M. Rashid, he resigned from his job and returned to Bombay in 1942 and again resumed his work with the film industry. He wrote screenplay for films such as ‘Chal Chal Re Naujawan’, ‘Mirza Ghalib’, ‘Shikari’ and ‘Aatth Din’. 
Some of his notable short stories that were composed during this phase were ‘Bu’, ‘Dhuan’ printed in ‘Quami Jang, Bombay in February of 1945. 
He stayed in Bombay till the partition of India in 1947. In January 1948, he moved to Lahore, Pakistan, with his wife and children against his intentions, as the brutality of partition and communal riots forcedhim to do so.
After arriving in Lahore, he connected with prominent intellectuals like Ahmad Nadeem Qasmi, Ahmad Rahi, Nasir Kazmi and Faiz ahmad Faiz. They used to sit down together in the iconic ‘Pak Tea House’, and engage themselves in passionate literary debates and political arguments. 
In 1950, Manto wrote a series of essays, entitled “Letters to Uncle Sam’, where he expressed his concerns on local and global issues.He predicted of a future as depicted in one of the essays, when literature, poetry, art and music, every form of expression would become censored. 

**Controversy
Saadat Hasan Manto was accused of obscenity in Pakistan and India. He faced the trial
three times in India before 1947 (under the section 292 of the Indian Penal Code) for ‘Kali Shalwar’, ‘Dhuan’ and ‘Bu’ and three times in Pakistan after 1947 (under the Pakistan Penal Code) for ‘Upar Neeche Darmiyaan’, ‘Thanda Gosht’ and Khol Do. However, he was not convicted and was fined in one case only. It validated the fact that Manto always believed in portraying the inhuman and barbaric scenario of his times with a political bite and black humour rather than painting a pretty and polite picture. On his charges of obscenity, he declared the statement, “I am not a pornographer but a story writer,". 

**Major Works
Toba Tek Singh’ (1955) published in Urdu, narrates the story of inmates residing in a Lahore asylum, who are to be shipped to India, following the partition of 1947. The story is a heart-wrenching satire on the relationship existing between Indis and Pakistan.
Thanda Gosht’ (1950) is a compelling short story that depicted a brutal picture of the 1947 communal riots. The story is about the Sikh Man who is stabbed by his mistress during sex when he admits to raping the corpse of a Muslim girl. Hence, it is synonymous with the title, which means ‘cold flesh’. Manto underwent a trial in criminal court for this story.

**Family & Personal Life
In 1936, Sadat Hasan Manto’s parents arranged his marriage to Safia Deen, later changed to Safia Manto. He penned down an essay entitled ‘Meri Shaadi’(My Wedding) dedicated to his marriage. 

Safia gave birth to a son, Arif, who died in his infancy. The death of their newborn son, pained Safia and Saadat to the very core. 
Thereafter they had three daughters, Nusrat Manto, NIghat Manto and Nuzhat Manto.  

He became increasingly addicted to alcohol in his later years, which ultimately led to cirrhosis of the liver. He passed away on 18 January 1955 due to multiple organ failure, in Lahore, Pakistan, at the mere age of 42 years. He was survived by his three daughters and his wife Safia. 

**Legacy
The Government of Pakistan posthumously awarded Manto Nishan-e-Imtiaz on 14 August 2012.
On January 2005, Manto’s 50th dealth anniversary, his face was commemorated on Pakistani Postage Stamp.
Danish Iqbal’s portrayed the distinguished writer in a whole new light through his play ‘Ek Kutte Ki Kahani’, on the eve of his birth centenary.
Two films entitled ‘Manto’ has been made based on his life, one in 2015 by Pakistani director Sarmad Khoosat and a Bollywood film in 2018, by Nandita Das and starring Nawazuddin Siddiqui.

**Trivia
His favorite dish was Gaajar Ka Halwa (An Indian dessert made of grated carrots).
He liked to write with Sheaffer pens.
He preferred wearing Gold embroidered shoes most of the time.
Bombay was his revered destination.
He preferred to complete a story entirely in one sitting. Just a few months before his death, Manto wrote his epitaph, which would have been read as, “Here lies buried Saadat Hasan Manto in whose bosom are enshrined all the secrets and art of short story writing. Buried under mounds of earth, even now he is contemplating whether he is a greater short story writer or God.” It was never imprinted on his tombstone later on. 


Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Back to Life: A Dark Comedy with a Soul


Miri Matteson sits staring at the bored expression of her parole officer Janice as she starts reading from a form: “if you are feeling depressed or have a crippling feeling of deep hopelessness …” Janice then pauses for a moment to flip the page, continuing, “…it’s normal.” Miri, with her bare face, gives a wan smile and then nods. Back to Life starts with 30-something Miri returning to her hometown after serving 18 years in prison. But this series, like many others, never shows parades of flashbacks, as it focuses on Miri getting a second chance in starting her life from scratch over again-if she will ultimately achieve to do so bearing the societal interferences. 
Back to Life is an ace comedy-drama that weaves relatable jokes on naturally woven, delicate relationships, family, and jobs into a plot that is multilayered ad well-written. It premiered on BBC One on 15 April, 2019. The series will be launched in the US on 10 November 2019, on Showtime.

Back to Life Cast: Who is in it?
Back to life consists of a cast of intriguing and offbeat characters, all living with secrets and vulnerabilities of their own. Daisy Haggard, who has also co-written the series, stars as the protagonist, Miri Matteson, an ex-convict who returns to her childhood home, the place of the crime. She attempts to forge her adult life anew with an optimistic approach despite receiving hostility from her community and continually getting reminded of her past through her surroundings. Geraldine James, known for enacting Mrs. Hudson in the Sherlock Holmes movies, plays the role of Caroline Matteson, Miri’s sexually frustrated mother. She appears to be brittle and uptight, who cares about the perception of the community more so than the well-being of her own daughter. Her anger and frustration often lead to her acting out in many self-destructive ways. Richard Durden, known from the TV show, Silent Witness, plays Miri’s reserved father, Oscar Matteson. He, like most constricted British men of his generation, finds Miri’s arrival as unsettling. He seems more concerned about recycling and saving the environment than saving his own marriage. 

Jo Martin, known from The Long Song, appears as Janice, Miri’s over-sharing parole officer with no verbal filter. A distressed bureaucrat, she stamps over all of Miri’s pleadings even when she reaches out for help. Christine Bottomley plays the role of ex-best friend Mandy, who was close to the victim. Her close relationship can help explain the reason why she never contacted or visited Miri in prison. She is one of the people who seek out to re-establish her connection with Miri upon her coming back home, but Miri feels undeniably hesitant to give it another chance. Jamie Michie, known from his character Steelshanks in Game of Thrones, plays Dom, Miri’s first love. Adeel Akhtar plays her next-door neighbor Billy, with whom she forms a friendship. Liam Williams appears in the role of the chip shop owner, Nathan. 

Back to Life Plot: What is it about?
Written by Daisy Haggard and Laura Solon, Back to Life tells the story of a woman’s struggle to reintegrate back into her community in Hythe, Kent, following an 18-year stint in prison being charged with the murder of her best friend. It follows the story from there on as to how she rebuilds her life after committing a crime so severe that she had to serve a sentence for nearly two decades, depleting most of her teen and adulthood. 

The first episode starts with Miri trying to mend the fences within her home, looking for a job and reconnecting with her childhood love, Dom. The gravity of her crime gets revealed quite early to the viewers, evidenced by the hostility with which the people of her hometown greet her, the abusive graffiti painted on the wall of her parent’s garden, and her job applications getting rejected with insults and offensive language (“You can clean offices in hell, you sick bitch”) being hurled at her. 

There is also a mystery surrounding the event of that fateful night that gets further complicated by the appearance of a strange Scandinavian man. He informs of apparently opening the case and starting with a reinvestigation. The viewers get convinced of a further truth that is getting masked with the playing out of her mother’s affair with a man in Hythe. In the midst of all this, Miri befriends her next-door neighbor Billy (Adeel Akhtar), who is taking care of his mentally ill aunt. The approaching presence of Mandy (Christine Bottomley), her ex best-friend, makes her uneasy and claustrophobic as it reminds her of the night the murder was committed. 

And then there are the magnificent visits from Miri’s self-interested probation officer Janice (Jo Martin), who does pay heed to any of the concerns and distresses of her client, but instead pays more attention to the refreshments provided (“Your biscuit game is strong!”). Season 1 ends with Miri agreeing to meet the mysterious Scandinavian man to further know about the truth behind her crime. Determined to move on, she decides to take the matters in her own hands and confronts everyone at a community meeting. The meeting gets disrupted due to her confrontation with many secrets and lies coming to light, ending the series in a cliffhanger.

Back to Life Season 2: When will it premiere?
Back to Life Season 1 consisted of six episodes that were released as a boxset on BBC iPlayer on 15 April 2019. It aired on BBC One from 15th to 20th April 2019. Each of the episodes had a running time of 23 to 25 minutes. When asked with the possibility of Season 2, Haggard responded that she would love to do a second season as they “know where to go with the story,” but nothing has been confirmed as of yet. 

Back to Life Season 1 trailer
While the production team informs the viewers of the show being renewed for a second season, you can watch the season 1 on BBC iPlayer’s official website page. Here is the trailer:





Paul Dano joins as The Riddler and there will be blood

The Batman faces another new villain.

Just a few days ago, the news of Zoe Kravitz joining the cast as Catwoman was confirmed, and now another villain joins in the mix. It is learned that Paul Dano has been confirmed to play The Riddler in director Matt Reeves' upcoming The Batman Movie.

The Little Miss Sunshine and There Will Be Blood actor will be facing against Robert Pattinson playing Batman, in this very noirish take on the DC story. Dano was cast after Jonah Hill failed to agree on a deal with Warner Bros. Hill was in talks to be either playing The Penguin or The Riddler, and it was still in negotiations as to which role he was going to portray. There is still no clear reasons found behind Hill passing up the role, leading to the production house going on a different approach to replace him.

Dano's acting debut started from 2000 release The Newcomers. He has played significant roles in films such as There Will Be Blood, Looper and 12 Years a Slave. In The Batman, he will star as Edward Nashton/Nygma, aka The Riddler. This will be the very first major comic book role for Dano, who has typically worked with prestigious art-house material films. He is characteristically different from Jim Carrey, who played the role against Tommy Lee Jones's Batman in Joel Schumacher's 1995 adaptation Batman Forever. It will be fascinating to see him translating this role on the screen, which is purportedly going to be a serious and dark tale following from the Christopher Nolan glory days.

The Riddler made his debut in the Detective Comics #140 in October 1948 issue and has been a staple perpetrator in the Rogue Villains Gallery of Batman ever since. The film will depict the tale of Edward Nashton before he took on the villainous persona as the Riddler.
"What's exciting about Batman is how it relates to now and also how personal it can be," Reeves said this earlier this year. The character is envisioned to be a far cry from the bright green catsuit-wearing portrayal of Carrey. Anticipations are that Reeves will be taking a more grounded and factual approach with the character and the film, more so like Nolan's films that were opposed diametrically from the brightly-colored, splashy camp of Joel Schumacher's creation.

The cast also comprises of Jefferey Wright as Commissioner Gordon. Gary Oldman enacted the role in Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight Trilogy.
Warner Bros. has announced to release The Batman in theatres on June 25, 2021.