/dig
born on Oct 10th :shock: and that too in 73. No wonder he is *dominating* and delivering consistent hits.
Why ya? What's special about Oct 10th?
<dig>
In numerology, it is so+so+so.........so *SPECIAL*. October - 10 (Sun). If you are born on 1, 10, 19 and 28, the power just doubles. Out of that, 10 is more powerful than all other three numbers. Added to that *all dominant* personalities were born in the 20th century when the sum of the last two digits of the year was 10. In the case of Rajamouli, it is an amazing formulation.. 10 - October (10) - 19 (which is again ten) 73 (which is again ten but this one makes it even more powerful).
10-10-"10""10".
Let us take sivaji sir - 1 - October (10) - 19 (which is ten again), 28 (which is ten again)
1 - 10 - "10" "10"
Bill gates - 28 - October - 1955
and the list goes on.....
P.S: not for people who don't believe in astro and numerology. Take it as a joke or whatever :)
Above analysis is mine. So, you have every to laugh if you know numerology :wink: </dig>
Ajay anna, when is your birthday. Forgot the exact date :wink: Neengalum october ah :P
I don't know why people love this movie so much...
fun filled entertainment.......
Selva,
Yes. I am an October born too. 24th Oct,81
Anupama Chopra's review: Makkhi
Rating: ****
Makkhi is the most outlandish film I've seen in years. It's also the most fun I've had in a theatre recently. This is the dubbed Hindi version of Eega, which was released earlier in Tamil, Telegu and Malayalam, but nothing has been lost in translation. Makkhi is the story of a young man named Jani who gets killed because he loves a girl coveted by a lecherous billionaire.
Jani is then reborn as an insect but he doesn't let his size get in his way. He takes revenge for his murder by slowly destroying the billionaire's peace of mind, his business and his power. It takes courage to pick a story as weird as this. Clearly writer-director SS Rajamouli is equipped with guts and a ferocious imagination.
First, he creates a creepy villain: Sudeep is wonderful as the baddie unhinged by a fly. Then Rajamouli imbues a fly with enough personality to take on this villain. It's a tightrope act, and there are times when you think the film has gone too far. At one point, the fly is communicating with his girlfriend by writing with her tears.
But Rajamouli keeps you hooked. By the end, I was clapping and rooting for the fly. How many films can get you emotionally invested in an insect? Makkhi is a mad roller coaster ride that's worth taking.
The original for Naan Eee... :lol:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQ7UTuMdia8