MY BLOG SPOT.: Review
Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 January 2021

REVIEW :  Imtiaz super market
January 19, 2021 2 Comments






Hey guys!! Yesterday I went to Imtiaz supermarket, Gulberg Greens. for buying groceries ad stuff and I was shocked to see the discounted rates of the products.

Even the vegetables and fruits were so economical to buy that I decided to purchase maximum stuff from there.

I was busy filling my cart when I came across another breaking news that Imtiaz gives gifts at the purchase of Rp.7500/-. 

You can feel what I would be thinking after that.

I immediately added up things-to-buy in my grocery list to complete the figure of  Rp.7500/- just to get the gift 😂

. After achieving my goal, I went to the counter to receive my gift. I was shocked to see the variety of gifts. There were three kinds of gifts.

One was a box that contained boxes of tissues.

Another was the box that contained a box of spices and the third one was the box that contained ketchup of different kinds. 

One gift was allowed at the purchase of  Rp.7500 /-. 

I got one among the three and decided to get the other two for my future purchases.

Now I am desperately emptying my grocery items so that I can visit Imtiaz exactly at the first of the next month for grocery to get the other two gifts😂😂  


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Wednesday, 13 January 2021

REVIEW ON FOOD PLACES: MONAL
January 13, 2021 3 Comments

                      


MONAL is a very beautiful visiting place in Islamabad. It is one of most beautiful resturant in Pakistan. It is ranked #1 resturant by tripadvisor.

It is situated at the hill,called, Margalla Hills. There is another resturant, named , LA-MONTANA, but MONAL got the luck because it is more famous than the former one.

Not only the view is amazingly attractive,but also its food. Its food is mouth-watering.

Honestly speaking, I visit this resturant not just because of the food, but also because of the view. I am saying again and again but, in actuall, its view is mesmerizing.

Do visit it whenever you get a chance to come to Islamabad. It is worth-visiting place.




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REVIEW--SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION--1994
January 13, 20211 Comments





The Shawshank Redemption" is a film about time, constancy and dedication - not provocative qualities, perhaps, but instead they create on you during the underground progression of this story, which is about how two men doing life disciplines in prison become friends and sort out some way to fight off despair. 


The story is portrayed by "Red" Redding (Morgan Freeman), who has been inside the dividers of Shawshank Prison for a long time and is its driving business visionary. He can get you whatever you need: cigarettes, candy, even a little stone pick like an amateur geologist may use. One day he and his fellow prisoners watch the latest busload of prisoners dump, and they make bets on who will cry during their first night in prison, and who won't. Red bets on a tall, lean individual named Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins), who looks like a guiltless spectator in the forested territories.

The Shawshank Redemption" is a film about time, constancy and dedication - not provocative qualities, perhaps, but instead, they create on you during the underground progression of this story, which is about how two men doing life disciplines in prison become friends and sort out some way to fight off despair. 



The story is portrayed by "Red" Redding (Morgan Freeman), who has been inside the dividers of Shawshank Prison for a long time and is its driving business visionary. He can get you whatever you need: cigarettes, candy, even a little stone pick like an amateur geologist may use. One day he and his fellow prisoners watch the latest busload of prisoners dump, and they make bets on who will cry during their first night in prison, and who won't. Red bets on a tall, lean individual named Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins), who looks like a guiltless spectator in the forested territories.

However, Andy doesn't cry, and Red loses the cigarettes he bet. Andy ends up being an amazement to everybody in Shawshank, because inside him is a particularly ground-breaking supply of assurance and strength that nothing appears to break him. Andy was an investor outwardly, and he's in for homicide. He's obviously honest, and there are a wide range of subtleties including his case, yet inevitably they take on a sort of falsity; every one of that checks inside jail is its general public - who is solid, who isn't - and the deliberate entry of time. 


Red is additionally a lifer. Now and again, estimating the many years, he goes up before the parole board, and they measure the length of his term (20 years, 30 years) and inquire as to whether he thinks he has been restored. Goodness, most clearly, truly, he answers; yet the fire leaves his confirmations as the years walk past, and there is the feeling that he has been standardized - that, similar to another old lifer who executes himself after being paroled, he can presently don't imagine life outwardly. 


Red's portrayal of the story permits him to represent the entirety of the detainees, who sense a guts and respectability in Andy that endures the years. Andy won't kiss butt. He won't withdraw. Yet, he isn't rough, just considerably certain about himself. For the superintendent (Bob Gunton), he is both a test and an asset; Andy thoroughly understands accounting and assessment planning, and after a short time he's been moved out of his jail work in the library and doled out to the superintendent's office, where he sits behind a calculator and watches the superintendent's badly gotten gains. His notoriety spreads, and in the long run he's doing the assessments and benefits plans for the majority of the authorities of the nearby jail framework. 


There are key minutes in the film, as when Andy utilizes his clout to get some cool brews for his companions who are chipping away at a material work. Or on the other hand when he gets to know the old jail curator (James Whitmore). Or then again when he violates his limits and is tossed into isolation. What discreetly astounds everybody in the jail - and us, as well - is how he acknowledges the great and the terrible as all piece of some bigger example than no one but he can completely see. 


The organization between the characters played by Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman is significant to how the story unfurls. This isn't a "jail show" in any ordinary feeling of the word. It isn't about savagery, mobs or acting. "Redemption" is in the title on purpose. The film depends on a story, Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption, by Stephen King, which is very not normal for the greater part of King's work. The awfulness here isn't of the heavenly kind, however of the sort that streams from the acknowledgment than 10, 20, 30 years of a man's life have unreeled in a similar perpetual day by day jail schedule.

The chief, Frank Darabont, paints the jail in dreary grays and shadows, so when key occasions do happen, they appear to have their very own daily existence. 


Andy, as played by Robbins, hushes up about his contemplation. Red, as Freeman plays him, is thus a vital component in the story: His nearby perception of this man, as the years progressed, gives how we screen changes and track the proportion of his effect on people around him. And all the time there is something different occurring, covered up and mystery, which is uncovered uniquely toward the end. 


"The Shawshank Redemption" is anything but a discouraging story, even though I may have made it sound that way. There is a great deal of life and humor in it, and warmth in the companionship that develops among Andy and Red. There is even fervor and anticipation, albeit not when we anticipate it. Yet, generally the film is a moral story about clutching a feeling of individual worth, regardless of everything. If the film is maybe a little delayed in its center sections, perhaps that is important for the thought, as well, to give us a feeling of the heavy entry of time, before the greatness of the last reclamation.



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Book Review: Forty Rules Of Love
January 13, 20210 Comments


Today I decided to share my review of the book' Forty Rules Of Love'.

But before sharing my perspective, I would like to bare my heart on what I felt when I  read that novel. I felt like I was there, at that timeline. I enjoyed it so much that I learned all the forty rules from the depths of my heart.

Again; before sharing the review, I would highlight its summary a little bit.

Here it goes:

 Book Summary: The Forty Rules of Love:

The Forty Rules of Love is a sublime capture of two records – one set in the contemporary events with Ella, a housewife as the legend. Hers is a record of lost love and assumption, till she winds up changed because of a book she ought to examine as a few of her new position's responsibilities. The resulting story is that of the book 'Sweet Blasphemy', set in the thirteenth century, which portrays the lives and associations of Shams of Tabriz and Rumi. 

As the plot spreads out, Ella goes winds up spellbound with the story she is as of now scrutinizing and decides to take practices from the perspective of the forty guidelines of fondness, set somewhere near the Shams of Tabriz. 

She is ultimately convinced, her relationship and lives are proposed to be changed by the essayist of the book, Aziz Zahara – much the same as Rumi's life changed by the Shams of Tabriz. 



Now, comes my review:


Book Review: The Forty Rules of Love:


Ella Rubenstein, a melancholy forty-year-old housewife with a tricking life partner and three children; reliably such an individual your mother would underwrite of! She couldn't get a handle on why she had these questions. For the duration of the time, she has gotten vain with her anguished life, relinquishing fondness and assumption. She continues driving her regular daily existence, choking out herself with nuclear family tasks and evading conflicts. 

Being a housewife for a significant drawn-out period of time, her life finally takes a turn when she should review a book – 'Sweet Blasphemy', as a few of her new position's responsibilities, as a theoretical observer. Since the time she read the chief sentence, the book ties her as its own. She sets the ball moving with a movement of real conversations through messages with believe it or not simply the maker Aziz Zahara. 


"Each certifiable friendship and family relationship is a record of abrupt change. In case we are a comparable person when we revered, that suggests we haven't adequately treasured.

Set in the thirteenth century, it portrays the trip of a genuinely famous pair – Shams of Tabriz and Rumi. 

Deceptions of Tabriz, a wandering dervish, and comprehensive Sufi, plots the forty rules of veneration which he awards to singular Sufi enthusiasts. By morals of his enrichment of having dreams about the future, he predicts his own death. He decides to give his understanding to someone at standard with him, someone as sincere and in love as he is by all accounts. 


He takes off right to Baghdad to find Rumi, a minister with a disturbed soul. On the course of his allowing data, he faces scorn and disappointment from others, especially Rumi's family. Disregarding all odds and dangers, he shows the method of light and love to Rumi; in this manner crediting to his getting maybe the most sought-after Sufi and essayist, taking everything into account. 


"In case we are a comparative person when we worshiped, that suggests we haven't adequately treasured." 

Shafak, being an unfaltering lady dissident herself, guarantees her female characters are the most grounded and getting a handle on. The thirteenth-century plot is particularly polyphonic, thus controlling us to the various perspectives of people around and not just the Shams of Tabriz, be it the forlorn prostitute, the roadside untouchable, or the fledgling aide at a madrassa.

There are agent approaches between the plot in the thirteenth century and the one in current events – The time of social unsettling influence, people varying on exacting feelings of others, the forty guidelines with the age of the protagonist(and why it's the best an extraordinary time, in reality), the disturbing, lovelorn heart of Rumi as is Ella's, the controlling light that Shams is for Rumi, as Aziz is for Ella; and the basic aftereffects of these unknown affiliations. The plot with Ella is likely the more delicate story-line of the two; with simply Ella's thoughts being voiced and no of various characters in her everyday presence. This is a proposed examination for all refrain fans and Rumi admirers like me. This current one for the soul!

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@zainab khan