Thursday, March 09, 2006

Six Stigma

Idea one
Two guys get together for a common motive, like study. Along the way, they discover that this is not what they truly wanted. As usual, disillusionment leads to a quest; the quest as always looks promising and rewarding. Along the quest, they discover it not the ends but the very quest that they wanted. This could be an interesting build up in form a host of activities to escape the disillusion.

Idea two:
An aging professor hires a struggling film script writer to write his autobiography, though this is an oxymoron but the professor promises to pay him enough to keep the secret buried. What follows is a series of interesting mix-ups of facts and fiction as seen by the two characters at the opposite ends of the so-called autobiography. Neither of them ever would have imagined what would follow. While the professor tries hard to make the story of his life an engrossing fare, the writer surprisingly likes to stick to reality, as he has had enough of dramatizing in his unsuccessful fiction writing career for the film.


Idea three: if everything was reasonable, nothing would happen – Dostoevsky
A successful film director in the commercial realm decides to dilute his success image in order to take a leap to the cinema of the absurd. But his commercial overtones come in the way of his intentions. Now he has to make a disaster of a movie in the commercial color. Will he be able to realize his dreams of a failure?


Idea four
A journalist leaves his high paying news channel job to pursue his eternal dream of writing a book based on factual events. He has the research work, the places to go, the people to meet, the things to write. But his biggest adversary is his own assistant who is divided over fictionalizing facts and presenting them in their true color.


Idea five
A Software professional who doubles up as a brilliant writer decides to give up everything and pursue his lesser known talent. But was it a wise decision?


Idea six
A poet takes to teaching students to pass entrance exams for foreign universities to earn a living. But as he must try hard to avoid his artistic overtures, he discovers that he can actually spread his singularly unique ingenuity to students who surprisingly do not want that.

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