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Friday, October 18, 2019

'Bharaate' review: Sri Murali film is all mass with too many subplots

Sandalwood
The storyline is a hotchpotch of situations from standard commercial films.
Big sets, grand costumes, lavish frames, but a slightly worn-out storyline – that’s Bharaate for you. Bharaate – meaning commotion or loud noise – the title itself speaks for the narrative. Aimed at the masses who love to watch an action-packed extravaganza unfold on screen, the movie fits the brief. But, is that enough? Jagan Mohan (Sri Murali), an Ayurveda practitioner, lives with his parents – Sumanth and Tara – in Jodhpur, Rajasthan. He is also a part-time tourist guide. Jagan comes from a family of Ayurveda practitioners and his knowledge is passed on from generations. He meets Radha (Sri Leela), a tourist, who's looking for a guide to show her around. It is love at first sight for the hero. Meanwhile, a sage recommends him to visit Durgapura in Karnataka and get a pooja done to ward off the evil that is soon to come his way. His entry into Durgapura opens a Pandora’s box as Bhallala (Sai Kumar), Pallava (Ravi Shanker) and Nayaka (Aiyappa Sharma) are fighting among each other. His entry changes the equations.  The first thing the audience would notice about the movie is the richness on the screen and colouring. Every shot is eyeball-grabbing. The storyline deals with numerous royal families and the art director as well as costume designer have done well to get the look right. While the plot is a bit lethargic, the grandeur on screen makes up for this. With the use of wonderful, contrasting colour combinations – be it in Rajasthan or Karnataka or even Switzerland - the movie is a visual treat. Even the weapons used by villains are carefully crafted and some of them are never-seen-before props.  However, the storyline is a hotchpotch of situations from standard commercial films. The numerous plots and sub-plots aren’t appealing at all. A lot of Sri Murali fans will be disappointed as it is nowhere close to Ugram or Mufti in terms of keeping the audience hooked to the screen. The movie has action, sentiment, songs, colours, too many actors, brotherhood, enmity with a touch of royalty and more. There is also a subplot akin to the age-old Punyakoti story. The film ends on a tepid note, becoming all preachy about forgiveness, which is a huge letdown. Lead actor Sri Murali is back amidst high expectations, after tasting success with Mufti, and his performance lives up to it. He is calm as the Buddha when he is treating his patients, cool as a Romeo when he is romancing the lover, and fierce as a lion when he fights with villains, which happens almost every five minutes! Sri Leela is good and holds her own along with Sri Murali when it comes to acting and screen presence. There are numerous actors in the film – Sai Kumar, Ravi Shanker, Ayappa Sharma, Sharath Lohitashwa, Avinash, Sumanth, Tara, Vanishree, Giri, Alok, Sadhu Kokila, Avinash, Ugram Manju and several others.  All of them, stalwarts in their own genres, have delivered the goods. Villains Sai Kumar, Ravi Shanker, Ayappa Sharma, Sharath Lohitashwa, Avinash stand out in competing with each other in every shot. There is a small surprise for Rachita Ram’s fans as well. Director Chetan Kumar, whose last two films Bahaddur and Bharjari were commercial hits, is back with another film with a very similar storyline. Though the movie tries to be about forgiveness and spreading love, there are too many action sequences which dilute the message. Arjun Janya’s songs are below average and except the title track, all the songs sound the same. Colourful choreography and costumes save the day for the songs but these are sure to remind you of the director’s previous movies. Minus the vibrant frames, the film is but a weak entertainer. 
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Intermittent power cut for the next 10 days in these Bengaluru localities: Full list

Power cuts
This disruption will be caused due to shifting of power lines to facilitate the smooth functioning of the bus lane.
Representational Image
Areas of Bengaluru, those surrounding the Outer Ring Road will face intermittent power cuts starting from Friday as the Bangalore Electricity Supply Company Limited (Bescom) will shift power lines to make way for bus-only lanes. Bescom officials said the outage will affect various areas in the city for the next 10 days (till Ocober 31) between 8 am and 6 pm as officials carry out the shifting work. Areas that will be affected are Devarbeesanahalli, Boganahalli, Panathur, Kadubeesangalli, Ashwath Nagar, Hemantha Nagar, Chinnappanhalli, LRDE Layout, Marathalli, Kariyammana Agrahara, Ramanajaneya Layout, Ananda Nagar, Karthika Nagar, Prestige Tech Park, Vikas Tech Park, Cessna Business Park, Munnekolala, Manjunath layout, Shirdi Sai Layout, Vagdevi Layout among other surrounding areas. The pilot for this traffic intervention program will begin from October 20 on the 18.5 km stretch on the Outer Ring Road between Silk Board and KR Puram where the left-most lane of the road has been cordoned off with the help of bollards. With the bus-only lanes coming into place, other than BMTC buses, only ambulances will be allowed on the left-most lane, facilitating faster movement. While buses can use other lanes as well, other vehicles won’t be allowed in the left-most lane. The idea behind is to incentivise bus travel, hence persuading more people to leave their personal vehicles behind to combat congestion in the city. Officials might also allow other high occupancy vehicles in this lane as well depending on the success of the system. The project has been planned by BMTC (Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation), BBMP, Traffic Police and DULT (Directorate of Urban Land Transport) officials with the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike being the nodal agency. The system is likely to be expanded to 10 other traffic dense routes in the city from November.   The move for bus priority lanes also comes at a time when the daily ridership of BMTC has been facing a steady fall over the years: from 51.3 lakh in 2014-15 to 36 lakh in 2018-19. At the same time, the length of cancelled routes has increased almost 200% over four years, from 241.6 lakh km in 2013-14 to 717.9 lakh km in 2017-18. Read: Bus priority lanes to be introduced in Bengaluru, but will it ease the traffic mess?  
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Bengaluru couple found murdered at their residence, cops suspect personal enmity

Crime
The police suspect the couple was murdered due to personal enmity.
Representational image
A couple was found murdered in Bengaluru’s  Garudacharpalya near KR Puram on Thursday morning. The police suspect that Chandregowda, 63, and his wife Lakshmamma, 55, have been murdered due to personal animosity. According to the police, the incident took place on Wednesday night and the couple was attacked with a blunt object. The duo hailed from KR Pet in neighbouring Mandya district and was running a sari shop. Their death came to light when one Shivaraj, who runs a flour mill below their house, went to inform them about overflowing water from the tank. “Shivaraj peeped through the window and saw Chandregowda lying in the hall. Suspecting foul play, he alerted Mahadevapura police, who broke open the door and found Lakshmamma’s body in the bedroom,” Whitfield Division DCP Anuchet told The Times of India. City Police Commissioner Bhaskar Rao also visited the spot. “We’re trying to find out who will benefit from these murders. The property ownership will go to the couple’s adopted daughter,” he said. Early on Wednesday, a couple and their child had visited Chandregowda and Lakshmamma, the report also quoted another shopkeeper as saying. While initially it was suspected that the murder was committed to steal valuables, it later came to light that no items were missing from the house. Deccan Herald reported that the police deployed forensic teams, fingerprint experts and dog squads to the crime scene and have formed three teams to nab the culprits. This double murder comes close on the heels of the sensational murder of former Vice-Chancellor of Alliance University, D Ayyappa Dore, on Tuesday night. The police on Thursday said that they have solved the crime and arrested Chancellor Sudhir G Angur. Family rift was the reason behind the murder, the police said. According to police, Suraj Singh, a functionary at the university, had allegedly carried out the crime at the behest of Sudhir to prevent his brother Madhukar from gaining control in the university. Ayyapa Dore was seemingly shifting his allegiance towards Madhukar, which allegedly prompted Sudhir to plot the crime. 
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Bengaluru residents irked as Pollution Control Board officer who worked for citizen rights transferred

Controversy
Manoj Kumar had recently submitted a scathing report to the Karnataka High Court regarding Bengaluru’s Solid Waste Management system.
Many resident groups and activists in Bengaluru are unhappy with the Karnataka government’s decision to unceremoniously transfer Karnataka IFS officer Manoj Kumar from his position of Member Secretary of the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board in Bengaluru.  Kumar declined to comment over the development. At the time of publishing an online petition demanding the officer be reinstated to his former position has got close to 500 signatures within a day’s time. A section of activists alleges that he was transferred as he was undertaking a few important projects that were aimed at bringing transparency in the board’s working. He was also working on expanding the board and was keen on building frameworks ensuring compliance with norms. A few residents pointed out recent instances when Manoj Kumar had gone against the status quo and had acted on complaints. Some of them include authoring a scathing report submitted to the Karnataka High Court regarding Bengaluru’s Solid Waste Management system in connection with dumping mixed solid waste in landfills. The report had stated that the BBMP was not following due procedure in waste management including running dysfunctional waste plants in contravention of Solid Waste Management Solid Waste Management Rules, 2016. He had also reportedly recommended criminal prosecution of officers for violating enviornmental laws.  Pranay Dubey, a resident-activist based in Electronic City, said, “Is the recent report submitted to the High Court the reason for his transfer? The government must cancel his transfer order. It is totally unfair and injustice to an officer who had worked for citizen’s welfare.” Zibi Jamal, member of Whitefield Rising, a collective which successfully went to court for the closure of a Graphite India factory unit said, “Does good work mean getting transferred? This proves that nobody wants good governance in Karnataka. He is one of the best officers we had engaged with during our struggle. He was always ready to hear us.” The transfer came within just 14 months of him taking this position while transfers are normally recommended once an officer completes three years in the department. Top officials confirmed to TNM that the transfer was not recommended by the Forest Department. Incidentally, Manoj Kumar is yet to get a posting after he was asked to take charge as the Chief Conservator of Forests, Canara Circle, Sirsi but subsequently withheld. Sources close to Kumar, said, “He was working on a system to ensure contactless enforcement and compliance which meant license or consent seekers have to meet officers very few times and hence limited harassment or bribery associated with the board.” “Other than that, he was trying to streamline the functioning of the common Effluent Treatment Plants. Dysfunctional ETPs are the reason for frothing lakes and rivers in the city’s outskirts,” the source added.
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Karnataka tops innovation index, top 10 states in list dominated by south, west

Innovation Index
These rankings were released by the NITI Aayog on Thursday under the India Innovation Index 2019.
Amitabh Kant, CEO, Niti Aayog
Karnataka has been ranked as the most innovative state in the country while the top ten states are concentrated mainly in southern and western India. These rankings were released by the NITI Aayog on Thursday under the India Innovation Index 2019. Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Telangana, Haryana, Kerala, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Gujarat, and Andhra Pradesh form the remaining top ten major states respectively. The top ten major states are majorly concentrated in southern and western India. Sikkim and Delhi take the top spots among the north - eastern & hill states, and union territories. Delhi, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, and Uttar Pradesh are the most efficient states in translating inputs into output. According to the NITI Aayog, the study is an outcome of extensive research and analysis, which looks holistically at the innovation landscape of India by examining the innovation capabilities and performance of Indian states and union territories. "The aim is to create a holistic tool which can be used by policymakers across the country to identify the challenges to be addressed and strengths to build on when designing the economic growth policies for their regions", it said in a statement. Karnataka is the leader in the overall rankings in the category of major states. Karnataka's number one position in the overall ranking is partly attributed to its top rank in the performance dimension. It is also among the top performers in infrastructure, knowledge workers, knowledge output and business environment. According to the NITI Aayog, the index shows that the innovation ecosystem of the country is strong in south and western parts of India. In fact, three of the top five major states are from southern India. Delhi and Haryana seem to be an exception to this rule and seem to be doing well on the Index. "Thus, there seems to be a west-south and north-east divide across the country", the index report said. The index was released in the presence of Rajiv Kumar, Vice Chairman, NITI Aayog; Amitabh Kant, CEO, NITI Aayog; Ashutosh Sharma, Secretary, Department of Science; Renu Swarup, Secretary, Department of Biotechnology; and Vaidya Rajesh Kotecha, Secretary, AYUSH. Rajiv Kumar expressed hope that the India Innovation Index would create synergies between different stakeholders in the innovation ecosystem, and India would shift to competitive good governance. Amitabh Kant added that India has a unique opportunity among its myriad challenges to become the innovation leader in the world.
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SC Collegium pushes for 'expeditious' elevation of K'taka district judge to state HC

Judiciary
The Centre had earlier asked to probe a sexual harassment complaint against Bhat which was found baseless by a former K'taka CJ.
The Supreme Court Collegium has resolved to reiterate its move to appoint Karnataka District Judge P Krishna Bhat as a judge of the state High Court. The collegium had, on February 8, 2016, recommended the name of judicial officer Bhat for appointment as Judge of the Karnataka High Court but it has been stuck for 44 months over allegations of harassment levelled by a woman judicial officer. The Centre asked to probe the allegations against Bhat on the basis of a complaint sent by the woman and after a probe conducted by the former Karnataka HC chief justice, it was found that the woman's complaint was without basis. "On reconsideration of the above proposal, referred back by the Department of Justice, Government of India to the Chief Justice of India, the Supreme Court Collegium in its meeting held on October 15, 2019, has resolved to recommend that its recommendation made on August 23, 2016 and reiterated on April 6, 2017 be processed most expeditiously," a statement said. The issue of elevating Krishna at the High Court had also become an issue within the Supreme Court judges with former senior Supreme Court Judge Justice Chelameswar writing about Centre’s interference regarding this to the then Chief Justice of India Justice Dipak Misra. In 2016, the then CJI TS Thakur had asked the then Karnataka High Court Chief Justice SK Mukherjee to conduct an inquiry against Bhat on certain allegations levelled by a subordinate woman judicial officer. Bhat's name was later recommended after the probe gave him a clean chit.  Justice Chelameswar’s letter was written soon after an unprecedented rebellion in the Supreme Court. On January 12, four sitting judges of the apex court – Justice Chelameswar, Justice Gogoi, Justice Kurien, and Justice Lokur – announced to the country that the administration of the Supreme Court was not in order.
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E-cig industry fractures over looming laws as Big Tobacco plays the long game

Smaller e-cig makers and retailers are allying with free-market ideologues, suing governments and appealing directly to the public.

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