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Satan in Paradise Lost

Paradise Lost by John Milton is an enthralling and amazing epic poem. Yes, it tells of the battle between Heaven and Hell in glorious detail. And yes it tells how Adam and Eve lose paradise. But, just as moving for me, was how someone else lost paradise and lamented that horrible loss in beautiful prose: Satan.

The devil made him do it

It’s not often that you sympathise with the devil and even side with him (unless you’re an Al Pacino fan in The Devil’s Advocate). But reading Paradise Lost, it’s hard not to.

There’s a heroic feel about the way he goes up against heaven and how he dares to challenge his creator who seems to mock him endlessly. There’s a beauty in the battles that he wages with himself and his maker and how his ambivalence about causing the downfall of humanity makes you want to curse him in one verse and cheer him on in another.

And as you feel Adam’s shock and sadness when he sees Eve eating the fruit and drops the wreath he made for her, you wonder if the devil isn’t silently shedding a tear — both for Adam and Eve and for himself. Because the fledgling war between heaven and hell signalled another paradise lost for the angels of heaven. Now they would forever battle, the outcome seesawing between them and never able to return to the joy of days when they celebrated their existence and creator together.

Satan seems all so human.

At last, I made it

As some may know, this was my 3rd attempt at the book and without a doubt I thoroughly enjoyed it, despite a couple of overlong passages weighed down by an obscene amount of Greek and Roman mythology and Biblical references (but that’s probably because I didn’t know most of them). I did do a semester of Greek Mythology at varsity, but this was ridiculous.

It took me a while to finish the book, having to get used to the prose while commuting on the bus and tube. Once you do get into it, though, it flows smoothly and you start singing along with the meter unwittingly. It’s also a bit difficult at first to get into the language, although modernised, but once in you don’t want to get out. It’s a bit like hearing a song the first time that you really dislike and after a couple of hearings you find yourself putting it on your top playlist (I’m sure “Umbrella” by Rihanna comes to mind here for some people?).

My favourite scene is when Satan, just after tricking Adam & Eve, meets up with Death and Sin and tells them to go “prepare” things for him and his cronies. They merrily oblige and start organising things on Earth for the next big bash. Classic.

I can’t vouch for its accuracy and Adam does seem a tad bit dismissive of Eve at regular intervals (her being so “good with domestic affairs”), but it’s a brilliantly told story and really a fantastic read. It’s a bit of effort, but a paradise of payoff.

Quotes

I’ll end off with some of my favourite quotes:

Meanwhile inhabit lax, ye powers of heaven

– An angel telling Adam & Eve to relax and take a chill pill

The old favourite:

Thus Belial, with words clothed in reason’s garb, counseled ignoble ease, and peaceful sloth, not peace.

– Announcing Belial, the smooth-talking, car-salesman demon.

And my favourite:

How few sometimes may know, when thousands err.

– And the thousands never want to ask the few either

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Wanted Poster

I’ve just come back from watching Wanted. I thought this one was best left for DVD but Sameer wanted to see it quite badly so I came along for the ride. Well, as far as a star rating goes, I’d give this one a 2 out of 5. Not as bad as The Happening but not as good as say, as Steven Seagal movie.

Here’s the synopsis. (Skip this bit if you don’t want to be utterly spoiled.)

  • Introduce pathetic protagonist
  • Kill random dude
  • Attempt killing on pathetic protagonist
  • Rescue protagonist
  • Kick the shit out of protagonist
  • Kick the shit out of protagonist again
  • Ditto above
  • Protagonist kicks shit out of others
  • Insert random plot point/backstory
  • Throw in a Darth Vader “I am your father” twist
  • Kill father
  • Insert awesome fight scene
  • Kill everyone else
  • End on “to be continued” moment

The plot of this movie is generally unimportant. It starts of at a steady clop and then droops in the middle with too much gratuitous violence that goes nowhere and adds little to the story.

As far as action is concerned, Wanted doesn’t bring anything new to the screen that we haven’t already seen in the Matrix, and it doesn’t do it nearly half as well. There is one decent fight scene but it’s vaguely reminiscent of the gun kata in Christian Bale’s Equilibrium.

The acting was only so so. James McAvoy was alright as the wide-eyed accountant turned assassin but his narration at the beginning and end of the movie seemed overdone. And then there’s Angelina Jolie, who’s really the face of this movie. Admittedly, she is smoking hot but for an actress who’s won an Academy Award, a Golden Globe and two Screen Actors Guild awards, she is surprisingly wooden and irrelevant. When did she become nothing more than the generic cypher for “sex”?

And then are my other minor irritations with the movie — poor sound effects, a confused score that doesn’t work well, and camera work that shakes and jars so badly at times that you can barely even see the intricate hand to hand fight scenes that you should be marveling at. (Very Chronicles of Riddick.)

Wanted succeeds in only one thing — pleasing the target audience of 15 year old boys. Most other people will be sorely disappointed with it.

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