Ahmed's Adventures

Monday, December 31, 2007

Pre-Production Started


So far our estimation of completing this project will take us approximately two years

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 11:57 AM :: 0 comments

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Sunday, December 30, 2007

Krispy Kreme Opening


Today they opened the first Krispy Kreme donut shop in Abu Dhabi at the Khaldiya Mall! For the first ten customers the shop had given them coupons for free donuts for an entire year!! I am happy to announce that I was the 7th customer!!!


Oh yeah, Baby!! Free donuts for a year!!!

A good approach for 2008 !!!

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 10:02 PM :: 2 comments

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Saturday, December 29, 2007

Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford


For a movie that has sat on a shelf for two years gathering bad buzz, this quiet wow of a Western sneaks up as one hell of a satisfying surprise. Artfully exciting and compulsively watchable even at a butt-numbing 152 minutes, the film makes good on the promise New Zealand writer-director Andrew Dominik showed with Chopper in 2000. Brad Pitt totally nails it as Jesse James. He just picked up the Best Actor prize at the Venice Film Festival, and damn if he doesn't deserve it. Pitt is built to reveal Jesse as the tabloid celeb of his day (1881). Living at home with the wife (Mary-Louise Parker) and kids under the alias Thomas Howard, when he's not out robbing trains with brother Frank (Sam Shepard) and the gang, Jesse is one sick puppy, an insomniac given to psychotic flare-ups and shooting enemies in the back. It's an irony that his biggest fan, the whiny nineteen-year-old hanger-on Robert Ford (the terrific Casey Affleck matches Pitt step for step), is the instrument of his doom. Adapting Ron Hansen's 1983 novel, Dominik paints a richly detailed mosaic on locations in Calgary and Winnipeg, and you can only marvel at the visual miracles achieved by cinematographer Roger Deakins. But it's in the scenes after Jesse's death, when Dominik pits truth against legend, that this intimate epic shows its teeth.

(5 out of 5 Stars)

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 12:30 PM :: 0 comments

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Wednesday, December 26, 2007

My First Trilogy




I just started writing the third book 'Barbed' and I'm planning on finishing it before the year 2008 ends, Inshallah!

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 2:01 PM :: 3 comments

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Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Finding Friends on Facebook

I received an unexpected friend request on Facebook, the name sounded familiar, sounded as if it was echoing from the past. I clicked on the profile and checked his photos, and holy crap! My old buddy from elementary school, I mean the last time I have seen him was when were were 11 years old!!! I messaged him up right away and we exchanged numbers, and met up!

After 15 years! It was amazing!!

I never thought I would say this, but thank you Facebook!

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 11:30 PM :: 3 comments

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Saturday, December 22, 2007

The Shipping News


Released 11th January, 2002


Some novels need to be left alone. Hear that, Hollywood? Annie Proulx's 1993 Pulitzer Prize winner uses language as bait. Hard, short sentences grow into flowing ones, and suddenly we are hooked by eccentric characters trying to redeem their blasted lives in the revivifying chill of Newfoundland. In the film, directed by Lasse Hallstrom and scripted by Robert Nelson Jacobs - the perpetrators of Chocolat - the language is leaden, the pace glacial and the characters indecipherable. It's easier to read the actors - they all seem eager to win an Oscar. Fat chance.
Kevin Spacey is wrong, wrong, wrong for the role of Quoyle, a pockmarked lump of a man with dead eyes and a dead-end future churning out bad copy for a newspaper in upstate New York. It's what they call an acting stretch: Look, Spacey can play dumb. No, he can't. John Travolta and Billy Bob Thornton, who both circled the role, could have done it better. Spacey, who can't hide the mischief and wit in his eyes, is way ahead of the incremental advances Quoyle is supposed to make in self-esteem as he fathers a child by a doomed trash queen, Petal (Cate Blanchett - the only sign of life in the film), takes their daughter, Bunny (played by the triplets Alyssa, Kaitlyn and Lauren Gainer), to live in Newfoundland with his feisty aunt Agnis (Judi Dench) and gets a job writing the shipping news for a local rag run by Jack Buggit (Scott Glenn). Quoyle meets Wavey (Julianne Moore), a single mom, and love blooms. Unless you've read the book, you'd never know what motivates these characters. To compensate, the script finally has them shout festering secrets at each other: "My brother raped me." "My husband left me for a bimbo." "My mother sold me like a slave." Blah. Blah. Blah. Show, don't tell, is the first rule in movies. Hallstrom ignores it, leaving audiences to sink into a stupor.
(2 out of 5)

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 10:18 AM :: 0 comments

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Solaris

Released 27th November, 2002

I love science fiction and I was very excited to hear that an intelligent and thought-provoking director like Steven Soderbergh was going to tackle outer space with the man who spawned the Terminator, James Cameron. With juggernauts like that and a very likeable leading man in George Clooney, what could this film not have going for it?


Soderbergh's first journey into science fiction is a remake of a 1972 Russian film entitled, Solyaris. The original was dubbed "the Russian 2001" and found a cosmonaut getting reacquainted with his long dead wife while orbiting the planet Solaris. It was deep, sensitive and even echoed some of the Russian ideals and thoughts of its time.


In the remake Clooney is Chris Kelvin (same name from the original film) an astronaut who comes to a nearly deserted space station to uncover a mystery. While investigating, Kelvin begins being haunted by his dead wife, Rheya (played by Natasha McElhone). Kelvin finds himself drifting away from reality as he comes face to face with why he maybe lost his wife.


The set-up and sentiment is sound in the remake but this isn't a 1970s science fiction film that uses its characters to reflect on Russian morals and ideals during the Cold War. Instead we are stuck with Clooney and McElhone who seem like too oddest of couples because there is little or no chemistry between these fateful lovers. The love between these actors is so forced I felt like I had just switched on a re-run of "Days of Our Lives". Then the film's photography finds itself panning and zooming into McElhone's face as it tries to show her through Clooney's eyes. Well if it were me I think he would be thinking, "Hmmm, did I brush today?" or "Boy, is my butt cold!"


As the film drifted from the importance of solving the space station's mystery and problems and focused on Clooney dealing with a distraught McElhone. I so wanted there to be some sort of space station disaster that would at least ignite some sort of release from the film's continuous mediocrity. I have seen snails with more gusto than this film.


There has been a lot of talk about the film's scenes involving Clooney's naked posterior. If it were McElhone's posterior the film would probably get a "PG-13" rating but since it's a "man's" butt it has to get an "R". They show more on NYPD Blue for cryin' out loud.


I believe that Soderbergh's sentiment for the subject matter is sound and that he did his best to bring forth passion in the space of the film's waterlogged 90 minutes. Next time, Steve, I suggest you cast someone Clooney enjoys kissing.


(1 Out of 5)

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 3:14 PM :: 4 comments

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New Book

I started writing a new book, after thinking hard and realizing that my two part story of (Brothers in Terror) and (Brain Washing) has no definite ending. I am going to write a third part, to conclude everything! Once and for all!

I will call this new book (Barbed)

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 2:34 AM :: 0 comments

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Eid Mubarak



Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 2:32 AM :: 0 comments

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Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Fargo

Released 8th March, 1996

William H Macy plays Jerry Lundegaard, a used car salesman with problems. He is in deep financial trouble that worsens when he fails to obtain a loan from his father-in-law (Harve Presnell) who is a wealthy businessman. In desperation, he hires two peculiar thugs - Carl Showalter (Steve Buscemi) and Gaear Grimsrud (Peter Stormare) - to kidnap his wife Jean (Kristin Rudrüd). The intention is that his father-in-law will pay the ransom that he will then split with the kidnappers.

The two thugs succeed in kidnapping Jerry's wife, but that is the point at which it all goes wrong. During their escape, they are stopped for a minor traffic offence and Gaear shoots the police officer. While they are trying to clear the body off the road, witnesses drive by and Gaear ends up shooting them too. Marge Gunderson (Frances McDormand), pregnant Chief of the local police, finds herself investigating the triple murder. While Marge follows the clues, Jerry's problems are getting ever deeper - his crooked car deals are coming back to haunt him, his father-in-law is interfering with the ransom plot, and now he also has to deal with threats from the kidnappers.

'Fargo' is a curious blend of humour and violence, none of it gratuitous. The plot is straightforward and often predictable, but the execution of the film lifts it far above the average. Frances McDormand won an Oscar for her portrayal of Marge Gunderson, and it was well-deserved - her performance is understated, simple and appealing. William H Macy is successful as the conniving car dealer, and watching him squirm adds greatly to the entertainment. The film looks beautiful, much of the action taking place against a desolate and snowy background, and some unusual camera angles add to the visual impression.

(3 Out of 5)

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 5:45 PM :: 0 comments

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Four Brothers


Released 12th August, 2005


It’s all about family, well, sort of.


Four foster brothers reunite on a cold snowy day when their foster mother (Fionnula Flanagan) is killed during a convenience store robbery. She was the only good thing to happen to these four social misfits and she was the only one who really cared.


After the funeral, Bobby (Mark Wahlberg), Angel (Tyrese) and Jack (Garrett Hedlund) decide that they need to look closer at the holdup because something just doesn’t fit. Meanwhile Jeremiah (Andre 3000) has second thoughts about getting involved since he is now a devoted family man.


The more leaves the brothers peal back on the mystery of their foster mother the more demons jump out of the closet. But it all seems to lead to a ruthless gangster named Victor Sweet (Chiwetel Ejiofor). How could the sweetest old woman in the world be involved with the mob?
Director John Singleton has had a lot of hits and misses throughout his career but he has never been able to capture the critical and commercial success that was his debut film, 1991’s “Boyz n the Hood”. But we have seen a lot of Singleton’s vision from that film in some of his films since then. “Poetic Justice”, “Higher Learning” and “Baby Boy” come to mind.


With his latest film, Singleton seems to be revisiting the 1970s yet again like he did a lot with his remake of “Shaft” in 2000. There seems to be a lot of homage to gritty crime films of the 1970s. The atmosphere, the snowy weather and the villains all feel very much like a Charles Bronson film.


Sure this film is basically just a revenge flick but it’s the way it’s presented and the characterizations of the brothers that makes this film probably the best film Singleton has made in five years. In some ways it’s a return to what he does best.


By far the best parts of this film are the eloquently, jump-out-of-your-seat action sequences. There is so much raw emotion, disorientation and intensity that they are sure to make any action fan salivate.


Mark Wahlberg is solid as the patriarch of the brothers. Andre 3000 is surprisingly effective in his role as the more reluctant brother. After starring in disasters like “Be Cool” and “Hollywood Homicide” it is no wonder Andre shines here. Chiwetel Ejiofor is the perfect villain and does an amazing job at balancing slimy, ruthless and suave.


I have to admit I wasn’t sure what to think when Singleton decided to start shepherding Tyrese in a lot of his films. But after “Baby Boy” and now “Four Brothers” I am starting to see that the man has a lot to bring to the screen. Tyrese does a lot of scene-stealing from Wahlberg in this film and it’s great to see.


Singleton’s next flick will put Tyrese front and center as he tackles the role of “Luke Cage” from Marvel Comics fame. Singleton is definitely the right director for the project and now it seems that Tyrese seems to be the right star. So, bring it on!


Singleton’s back on his “A-game” and “Four Brothers” is a reminder to how good Singleton can be when he is in his element.


(4 out of 5)

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 5:27 PM :: 0 comments

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Tuesday, December 11, 2007

3rd Novel Done!

Today I finished writing my third novel (Brain Washing) which took me 17 months to finish!!

Started writing on July 3rd, 2006 at 4:56am
Finished writing on Dec. 10th, 2007 at 9:30pm

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 12:28 AM :: 6 comments

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Saturday, December 08, 2007

Random Hookup

I was sitting at my regular cafe, trying to finish up my new book I have been working on for the past 17 months. As I was minding my own business and zoning into the world I have created, my phone rings and it appeared that someone sent me a bluetooth message and it read:

Are you that pretty lady who is sitting alone? :)

I looked around the cafe and indeed there was a lady, not really pretty, was sitting by herself reading a magazine, there was a family having lunch next to me, a group of guys chilling and laughing, and a bold man sitting by himself busy playing with his phone. I knew it right away that that man was the one who sent out the message thinking that I might be that lady he hoped for. What I did simply is that I completely ignored it and went back to my writing.

After less than two minutes, another bluetooth message from the same guy said:

I guess you are that pretty lady, say something or I will keep interrupting :) :)

I started laughing, and thought of a way to have fun! So I wrote:

Why don't you stop wasting my phone's battery and come and sit with me :) :) :)

Ironically, the lady was typing a message on her phone and was smiling too. So that made my trick seem realistic that she indeed messaged the guy, who was very excited and stood up and walked quickly toward her table. He sat down without introducing himself and as soon as he did, the lady flipped out and started screaming at him! He was really confused, he got up and walked back to his original seat and pretended to be flipping through some magazines and kept looking around but I made myself busy with my writing and held myself from laughing which was about to bust in flames!

Finally, he just paid the bill and walked out of the cafe. Which made me wonder if he even suspected me, and if he did how would he confront me? Hahahahaha!

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 12:03 PM :: 17 comments

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Monday, December 03, 2007

Christmas in the Middle East




Its a pity. That here in the Gulf Region would be decorating the malls, the airports, the streets with Christmas decorations! As if it was a Christian country. Note, that the Muslim feast day, Eid Al-Adha is on the 20th of December, and so far there is nothing about it on the streets or the malls, even the freaken airports.




That disgusts me.

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 7:33 PM :: 4 comments

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Sunday, December 02, 2007

Happy Birthday UAE


Today marks the 36th anniversary for the formation of the United Arab Emirates


To learn more about the United Arab Emirates click here

Posted by Ahmed Arshi :: 7:23 AM :: 0 comments

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