Sunday, 6 October 2013

Finally ManCity Ended the Everton Winning Streak

Manchester City’s Alvaro Negredo made a fine run into the box to slot home Yaya Toure’s reverse pass. PHOTO: AFP
LONDON: 
Alvaro Negredo and Sergio Aguero combined to help Manchester City bounce back from their Bayern Munich mauling by beating Everton 3-1 at the Etihad Stadium in the Premier League yesterday.    
Spaniard Negredo and his Argentine strike partner Aguero scored one apiece as City came from behind to earn a well-deserved three points.
Romelu Lukaku had given Everton a 16th-minute lead before City hit back, going some way to ease the disappointment of their 3-1 home defeat by Bayern in the Champions League.
Everton’s frustrating afternoon was complete when Tim Howard was credited with City’s third goal after 69 minutes after the keeper had tipped Aguero’s penalty on to the post, only for the ball to ricochet off his head and into the net.
“Equalising immediately was important, but more important was the character of the team, playing against Everton – the only unbeaten team in the league,” said City manager Manuel Pellegrini. “After a defeat (by Bayern) on Wednesday, it was important for me to see how the players reacted after that defeat.
“We really needed this victory because at the start of the game we were five points behind Arsenal and it is important to continue wining here at home.”
Meanwhile, Liverpool moved to the top of the league table with a comfortable 3-1 win over Crystal Palace at Anfield. Goals from Daniel Sturridge, Luis Suarez and Steven Gerrard were enough to land the team into top spot above Arsenal.
Wenger wary of West Brom threat
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger is expecting a stern challenge for his Premier League leaders when they travel to West Bromwich Albion today.
The Gunners will be bidding for an 11th straight win in all competitions when they arrive at The Hawthorns. But that sequence includes a League Cup victory against the Baggies where it needed a penalty shoot-out to separate the sides. West Brom caused one of the upsets of the season so far when they won 2-1 away to champions Manchester United last weekend.
“They had quite a strong side out (in the League Cup) and many of the regular players played, but they have a big squad,” said Wenger. “I noticed when I looked at their team who played at Manchester United, that they have a massive squad of experienced players, so it’s very difficult to predict who will play against us.”
Mata demands awayday success at Norwich
Midfielder Juan Mata believes Chelsea must quickly secure a first away win of the Premier League season if they are to kick-start their title challenge.
A trip to Carrow Road to face Norwich City today presents Jose Mourinho’s side with the latest opportunity to claim three points on the road.
“We need our first away league win as soon as possible,” said Mata. “If we want to fight for the title you need to win your home games but also pick points up away as well. Obviously when you play away it’s difficult, especially against teams like Norwich, who are very good at home, but we’re good enough to do it.”

LG nitro Review


LG’s next attempt comes in the form of the Optimus G Pro, which right off the bat comes across as a much better device. First of all, it doesn’t have an awkward square shape and secondly it boasts top of the line hardware that will make most people sit up and take notice.
So things look good on paper but how does the phone stack up in real life? Let’s find out.
Design
LG has a history of making some fine looking phones. Regardless of what the rest of the phone would be like, the hardware has usually been attractive on LG phones. In recent times, LG lost some of its design flair and instead decided to make generic looking phones. The Optimus G Pro is exactly that sort of phone.
Well, first of all, the Optimus G Pro is a big phone, particularly the height, which is long enough for the phone to peek out of your jeans pocket. Although credit must be given to LG to make this phone a bit narrower than the Galaxy Note II despite having similarly sized displays. This is instantly noticeable while using the phone as despite its size its not quite as ungainly to use as some of the other 5+ inch phones.
Build quality also seems quite good. LG, like Samsung, has gone for an all plastic body but it feels durable and although it isn’t anywhere near as awesome as the aluminum body of the HTC One or even the glass body of the Xperia Z it doesn’t look as bad as the Galaxy S4.
The problem is with the design, which is utterly boring. You’d expect the flagship smartphone of the company to have some design flair but you’ll find none of it here. The Optimus G Pro, especially in the black unit we reviewed, looks like a generic black slabs and will easily get lost among its ilk.
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The front of the phone sports the 5.5-inch display with a fairly minimal bezel on the top and bottom. Above the display is the earpiece, the camera and the sensors, along with the LG logo. Below is the physical home button flanked by the back key on the left and the menu key on the right.
The menu button has a special trick up its sleeve. The silver ring around it is actually the notification LED. And it’s not just any LED but full RGB LED, which means it can display any color you want. You can use an app like Light Flow to assign different colors to different app notifications, which can be very useful.
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Along the side is the power button on the right and the volume buttons on the left. The buttons are placed perfectly, where they fall exactly under your thumb and index fingers if you hold it in your right hand. There is also an extra button near the top on the left side. You can assign any app to it you want or disable it completely.
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On the top is the headphone jack, the IR blaster and the secondary microphone. On the bottom is the microUSB port and the primary microphone.
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On the back, you can see the camera lens near the top along with the loudspeaker and the LED flash on either side. The design reminds me strongly of the Galaxy S III, which too had a similar arrangement, including a bump for the camera. The lens has this plastic surround with a brushed metal finish that looks terrible and gets scratched easily.
The entire back side is a battery cover that comes off from the side. On the cover is a checkered pattern, which is similar to that of the Nexus 4 but since this is plastic and on the Nexus 4 it was underneath a glass it doesn’t look anywhere as good. The plastic back also attracts a lot of smudges and just looks awful most of the time.
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Remove the cover and you’d find the large removable battery underneath covering the micro SIM slot. The microSD card slot is on the side and can be removed without switching the phone off. If you look underneath the battery cover you’d find the hardware for the NFC as well as the wireless charging. The Optimus G Pro supports the Qi charging standard and will work with any any Qi-compatible charger that you might have.
The wireless charging feature is a useful addition. In comparison, neither the HTC One nor the Sony Xperia Z have this feature and the Galaxy S4 requires a special cover to work with wireless chargers. Unfortunately, I did not have a wireless charger at hand to test this functionality.
Display
The Optimus G Pro has an utterly gorgeous display. It is a 5.5-inch panel, which means it’s the same size as last year’s Galaxy Note II, but it has a resolution of 1920x1080 and uses IPS technology, which just makes it infinitely superior in comparison.
I have complained in the past about the pointlessness of 1080p panels on smartphones because at 5.0-inches and lower, it’s really hard to make out any difference in image quality compared to a similarly sized 720p panel. But at 5.5-inches, the extra pixels really do make their presence felt. 720p at this size would have been stretched a bit thin but 1080p looks perfectly fine, as you can tell from the 400PPI pixel density.
It’s the combination of the size, the resolution and the quality of the panel that makes the display on the Optimus G Pro such a joy to behold. The colors, contrast, viewing angles, outdoors visibility, etc. are all top notch. You just have to watch one of the videos that LG has pre-installed on the phone to realize just how good this screen is.
If I have to nitpick, and I will, I will point out the minor issue with the way the display is refreshed. The display on the Optimus G Pro gets refreshed from bottom to top and there is a noticeable time difference between the two points. Due to this, every time you scroll horizontally, you’d notice that the content on the bottom of the screen is moving slightly ahead of the content near the top of the screen. This is most easily observable in the application drawer as you move left and right.
The issue is not very severe and most people wouldn’t notice it as is apparent from that fact that no one seems to have reported it so far (or maybe it’s just on my review unit). It’s a minor issue in what is otherwise an absolutely fantastic display.
Hardware, Software and Performance
The LG Optimus G Pro runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 SoC, particularly the APQ8064T, with a quad-core 1.7GHz Krait 300 CPU and Adreno 320 GPU. This is one of the fastest processors available today and it shows in the performance, which we will discuss later. In terms of memory, the Optimus G Pro has 2GB of RAM and 16GB of internal storage space with microSD card slot for expansion. In terms of connectivity, it supports HSPA+, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.0, A-GPS, NFC and Infrared.
In terms of software, the Optimus G Pro runs on Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean with LG’s custom UI on top. As far as custom skins are concerned, LG’s isn’t most popular around but if you leave aside the blind hatred that is often leveled at Android skins and look at it objectively there is a lot to like here.
In terms of features, LG’s skin is almost on par with Samsung’s skin on the S4. There is a lot of useful stuff here, such as the notification drawer shortcuts and some of the less useful stuff as well, such as Smart screen which detects if you are looking at the screen to prevent switching off the display backlight and smart video that pauses the video when you look away. As you can tell, there is a lot of unabashed borrowing of features here from Samsung, including things like the one-handed keyboard and layout of the notification screen. LG even lets you arrange the Settings app in a tabbed layout, something Samsung introduced with the S4.
However, leaving aside some of the frivolous stuff there are some genuinely useful things here. There is an LG remote control app that works with the built-in IR blaster and lets you remotely control your TV, set top box, audio system, Blu-ray and DVD player, projector and even an air conditioner. The default LG keyboard is pretty decent but the best part about it is that it lets you enter emoji into your messages. LG has included system-wide support for typing and viewing emoji and this is not the terrible black, Android themed emoji that Google introduced with Jelly Bean but full color emoji that closely resembles the one you find on Apple’s devices. I personally find this a very useful addition especially considering how heavily emoji is used these days.
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Bloatware is minimum in LG’s skin and the phone just comes with a bunch of LG apps pre-installed. But the best part is that all of these can be uninstalled. There is a separate app called Application Manager that only exists to let you uninstall the apps added by LG. This is far cry from what you see on Sony and HTC phones that come loaded with all sorts of garbage apps.
My only real problem with the software is that it looks unpleasant at best and horrible at worst. LG clearly doesn’t spend enough time on the aesthetics of the whole thing or doesn’t have good enough designers. You tend to get used to it after a while but it never looks as good as stock Android or even the HTC Sense 5.
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In terms of performance the UI is largely fluid. The Snapdragon 600 SoC is quite powerful and makes quick work of UI transitions, scrolling and app launches. Meanwhile, the 2GB RAM ensures that performance remains good even when you have several apps running in the background. It pains me to say that even after all these years Android still doesn’t feel as fluid as iOS or Windows Phone but it seems to be getting there and at least on the Optimus G Pro it’s not all that far behind. It’s not the smoothest phone I’ve used but it’s quite good overall and definitely the most fluid Android devices on the market right now.
Multimedia
The Optimus G Pro has a 13 megapixel camera on the back with an LED flash. The camera takes some really good pictures in daylight. The 13 megapixel sensor manages to capture a fair amount of detail with natural colors but there is also noticeable sharpening in the images that looks unpleasant when you zoom in all the way.
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The camera has an HDR mode that you can use while dealing with high contrast scenes. The HDR mode is effective but subtle so it can be used for everyday shots without the photos looking unnecessarily over processed. More importantly, the HDR mode gets rid of the over sharpening and bit of the noise out of the images as well and gives them a cleaner look overall.
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In low light things go downhill considerably. The noise reduction algorithm is so severe that photos are soft to the point where they look unfocused. Even after repeated attempts indoor shots came out soft with poor details.
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For viewing images and videos, the Optimus G Pro is absolutely fantastic. A lot of this is due to the beautiful display that makes everything looks great. Watching 1080p videos in particular is an enjoyable experience and you can watch entire movies without an issue. The Dolby sound setting works really well if your videos have six channel sound in AC3 audio codec and the bundled LG headset also sounds pretty decent.
Battery Life
The Optimus G Pro has a mammoth 3,140mAh battery. With regular usage consisting of calls, messages, social networking, web browsing and playing music, the Optimus G Pro lasted for a day and a half on a single charge (3G), which is quite an achievement. While playing back a 1080p video at 70 percent brightness and headphones, the phone lasted for approximately six hours on a single charge (Wi-Fi).
Verdict
There is a lot to like with the Optimus G Pro. The screen is fabulous, the phone is fast, the camera is quite decent as long as you’re shooting in daylight and the battery life is really good. It also comes loaded with a ton of software and hardware features, some of which are useful and others you don’t really need.
As with everything, there are negatives here as well. The design, for once, is just plain drab and boring. I understand that is a subjective thing but most people agreed with me on this. The low light performance of the camera was also not impressive and LG’s software, although useful at times, is just unattractive.

Are these things really deal breakers? Maybe for some, but overall I think the Optimus G Pro is a really solid smartphone. It’s quite large so obviously so it’s not meant for everyone but if you are comfortable with large smartphones and don’t like what Samsung, HTC or Sony are doing then you should definitely take a look at this. More than anything, that display might just win you over

I’m not fit enough for 90 minutes, warns Bayern Munich star Gotze


I’m not fit enough for 90 minutes, warns Bayern Munich star Gotze
Bayern Munich midfielder Mario Gotze warns that he is not yet ready to complete a full 90 minutes after making his return from injury.
The 21-year-old had been out of action since picking up an ankle problem in the European Super Cup win over Chelsea but came on as a substitute in Wednesday's Champions League win over Manchester City.
Gotze has also been called up by Joachim Low for Germany's final two World Cup qualifying matches in October but, while he is thrilled to be back, the former Borussia Dortmund man stresses that he still has some way to go before he reaches full fitness.
'I still don't have the strength for 90 minutes. I've only been training for half the week. It was not so intensive,' the €37 million (£31.3m) man told Bild.
'I hope there will be more and more minutes. It's been nearly five months during which I've had no rhythm. I'm therefore delighted I can play again.'
Gotze is in line to make his third Bundesliga appearance of the season at Bayer Leverkusen on Saturday.

Where Did the Night fall..

As artists like Nicki Minaj, David Guetta and Lady Gaga dominate the mainstream, and with the greatest era of music is behind us, it’s time to switch to Pakistan’s experimental bands and slick beatsmiths.
As artists like Nicki Minaj, David Guetta and Lady Gaga dominate the mainstream, and with the greatest era of music is behind us, it’s time to switch to Pakistan’s experimental bands and slick beatsmiths.As artists like Nicki Minaj, David Guetta and Lady Gaga dominate the mainstream, and with the greatest era of music is behind us, it’s time to switch to Pakistan’s experimental bands and slick beatsmiths.
KARACHI: 
Dark was the Night, Cold was the Ground by Blind Willie Johnson is perhaps the greatest blues song ever written. Though covered by a bevy of artists over the decades, there is none that matches the original. No musician has managed to express the despair and ache that came naturally to blind and broke Willie Johnson.
From his guitar picking to the strange amalgamation of humming and melancholic moaning, it’s just magnificent.
It isn’t coincidental or surprising that the song has the unique distinction of being one of the 27 pieces of music sent to the Voyager Golden Record, which was launched into space in ’77.
But why are we talking about a blues singer from the ‘20s? Has the greatest generation of music passed us by or, to put it crudely, dead? To answer this question, we only need to hear the music.
Bob Dylan may have inspired countless bands around the world, especially in the United States of America, but he was inspired by the genius of Woodie Guthrie. Who is the Woodie Guthrie of music today? The jury’s still out.
Forgetting sales figure (since it’s a barometer of popularity and not talent) for a minute and focusing on music alone, some of the greatest acts are gone.
The era of The Beatles, Elvis Presley, The Doors, Pink Floyd, Bob Marley, Elvis Costello, Jimi Hendrix and The Clash is behind us. The greatest days of Guns N’ Roses, who gave us mammoth records like Appetite for Destruction and Use Your Illusion I and II, are behind us.
Kurt Cobain is dead and Nirvana no longer exists. The voice of the disenfranchised and the broken Kurt Cobain will remain one of the best singer-songwriters the world has ever heard. Though Dave Grohl made Foo Fighters formidable, he just doesn’t possess the magnetism that made Kurt so endearing or that self-loathing that made millions connect with him on a personal level.
REM, led by the incredible Michael Stipe, is thankfully alive but the band disbanded. U2 is around but the band hasn’t produced a timeless record like The Joshua Tree in years. The same holds true for other artists like Madonna and Prince. What was groundbreaking once upon a time is now meaningless and discomforting.
The mid ‘90s took Kurt Cobain away forever while Guns N’ Roses lost the plot. Artists like Red Hot Chilli Peppers and Tori Amos and Brit-acts like Radiohead and Travis made sense and redeemed faith in music.
In recent years, artists like Kings of Leon, The Black Keys, Kaiser Chiefs, Jack White and his various bands as well as solo projects, Peter Doherty and his various band albums as well as solo records, MGMT, Chris Cornell have put the punch back in music. And they are many others I’m missing, so forgive me.
The rules of the music industry changed over a number of decades. Up is down. Down is up. Vinyl is obsolete, the internet has empowered musicians with the choice of simply making their music available to the world for free or at a reasonable price and Steve Jobs changed the way we consume music with the iPod and the iTunes store. Record sales go up with an artist like Adele but, by and large, record sales are down.
What happens now?
Perhaps the greatest era of music is over. How else can one explain the enormous success of acts like Justin Bieber, Miley Cyrus, One Direction, Lady Gaga and Nicki Minaj?  However, one thing that’s changed is the homegrown seen in Pakistan. While the focus is almost always on mainstream acts like Atif Aslam, Ali Zafar or Strings, there are musicians who have given Pakistan an alternative.
There are beatsmiths like Talal Qureshi, Dalt Wisney, Smax, Toll Crane, TMPST, Rudoh, Friedi, Alien Panda Jury, DynoMan, Dreadnaught, Noahs Heark and many more making music that is as global as it is gets. They are bold and courageous musicians who are unwilling to compromise on their sound, which is experimental and evolving.
Mooshy Moo, a net label launched by Dalt Wisney (Sheryar Hyatt) and Forever South, a collective of beatsmiths, have a roster of some fine artists. Most of these artists can be heard on Soundcloud and often release their albums for free. They are making their own rules as they go along. And as for the beats, they range from slick to tribal, organic, hazy, soothing, trip-hopping and ultimately engaging.
English-language bands like //orangenoise have introduced Pakistan to a whole new genre called shoegaze. Sajid and Zeeshan’s contribution cannot be missed with two solid albums under their belt. Poor Rich Boy’s Old Money is just a beautiful record and proof that songwriting is an art.
Mole’s debut album, We’re Always Home, released in 2008, mish-mashed genres from punk to indie, video games and much more, bringing to mind bands like Animal Collective, Boards of Canada and many more. Mole returned with another EP, Visiting I, a couple of years later and still play together whenever possible. Basheer & The Pied Pipers produced a jaw-dropping, heart melting self-titled album with breathtaking songs like Once AgainCircling Nowhereand Monsoon.
Over the years, Co-Ven’s line-up has changed. Once upon a time, the band featured Ali Noor. Now that spot belongs to the super-talented Hamza Jafri.
Some of these artists reside in Pakistan while some live abroad. But their collective input to the sound industry of Pakistan is nothing short of genius. As listeners, we just have to pay attention.

Business News. GSP-Plus Status

Shedding value: 8% is the fall in rupee’s value against the dollar since the beginning of 2013.
KARACHI: 
All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (Aptma) Chairman Yasin Siddik said that the country’s (textile) exports can hit $15 billion in fiscal 2013-14 because of the approval of the Generalised System of Preferences Plus (GSP-plus) status from the European Union (EU) in January 2014 and sharp slide in the rupee against the dollar in recent months.
However, Siddik said he was equally perturbed with the rise in electricity and gas prices, which may off-set the prospects of any big jump in textile exports in the ongoing fiscal year.
While speaking to The Express Tribune, Siddik said that the grant of GSP-plus status from EU will have a positive impact on both unfinished and value-added textile exports of Pakistan.
Last year, Pakistan exported around $13 billion worth of textile products.
The fall of rupee has been seen as a positive sign for exports of Pakistan. The rupee has fallen 8% since the beginning of 2013. Moreover, it depreciated faster in the last two months, as it went down by a sharp 4% against the greenback.
With a share of over 50% in the country’s total exports, the textile industry is expected to emerge stronger in fiscal 2013-14.
Analysts believe that Pakistan’s textile exports are going to benefit from two more reasons. Firstly, China is focusing more on the technology sector instead of textile, but yarn demand from China is growing.
Secondly, Bangladesh – the second biggest textile exporter in the world after China – is not getting the same number of export orders as it was getting a year ago. The country is facing major challenges in safety concerns of textile workers. Recent fire incidents in factories of Bangladesh, where hundreds of workers had died, attracted negative international media coverage.
Despite these two developments, Pakistan is in the middle of cut-throat competition from India – the country’s regional competitor in textile exports. India – the third biggest exporter of textile goods in the world – is looking forward to make the most of these changing trends in the regional market and is targeting $17 billion textile exports this year.
Leading textile industrialists insist that the rise in gas tariff for captive power plants by 17.4% and electricity rates for industrial units by 57% in recent months are going to hit the profitability of the sector in the ongoing fiscal 2014.
However, despite these expected increases in the cost of production, analysts are upbeat on the profits of the textile industry in the fiscal year.
Pakistan is trying to get duty-free access to the United States – one of the world’s biggest markets for textile products – where Bangladesh exports its textile products in huge quantity and has managed to become a dominant player. On rising concerns of international labour rights associations, the US is in the process of suspending the GSP-plus status to Bangladesh. If this happens, it will give another boost to Pakistani textiles exports to the US in the coming years.
Pakistan only holds 1.5% of the global market share in textiles, which means that this industry has strong prospects to grow. Analysts believe that Pakistan’s textile exports will likely double in the next five years to $26 billion if the country receives the GSP-plus status from the EU.

helping hand..


Italian experts Gianluca Trotta, Gianelli Angelo and Mastranglo Felice offered lucrative incentive packages for their investment in projects of solar energy plants. PHOTO: FILE
SIALKOT: 
Italian solar and renewable energy experts offered their help to the industries of Sialkot to cope with the crippling energy crisis.
Addressing a meeting of Sialkot-based business tycoons at the Sialkot Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) on Saturday, Italian experts Gianluca Trotta, Gianelli Angelo and Mastranglo Felice offered lucrative incentive packages for their investment in projects of solar energy plants in the city.
SCCI President Dr Sarfraz Bashir presided over the meeting.
Bashir said the SCCI was also seeking foreign investment for establishing a 100-megawatt (MW) solar energy project in Sialkot and was in close contact with American, Chinese and German companies.
Former SCCI presidents also attended the meeting.

Dianna.

Despite humiliating reviews, Diana is still an amusing portrait.
The personality of Princess Diana shone across borders, making her a topic of global interest. She remains in the hearts of many, and the attention received by the movie based on Kate Snell’s 2001 book Diana: Her Last Love proves just that.
Directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel, the film Diana is an attempt to reproduce the last two years of the life of the Princess of Wales. Australian actress and Academy Award-nominee Naomi Watts plays the role of the highly admired princess in the film. Though known for her talent, Watts has suffered humiliating reviews, as a critic said, “the much-loved Princess of Wales has been recast as a sad-sack singleton that even Bridget Jones would cross the street to avoid.”
Watts makes her first appearance, giving the initial impression of a ‘lame’ Diana. Watts’s constricted smile almost takes away the element of spontaneity that came so naturally to Diana. However, when the central theme and love affair, between Pakistani surgeon Hasnat Khan (Naveen Andrews) and Diana blossoms on-screen, we find Watts slipping comfortably into Diana’s shoes.
The turning point comes when Khan informs the princess of his inability to marry her because both of them lead very different lives. Khan, a heart surgeon by profession, lives a life of quietude and privacy. Diana on the other hand is a public figure and her life is alien to privacy. Khan leaves Diana alone and this is the climax of the one hour 53 minute movie. Diana is devastated and is shown playing the piano fiercely as her tears fall to the keys.
There are small moments of relief from the tragedy that was Diana’s love affair. After the break-up, Diana goes to meet her friend to confide in. That is her moment of catharsis.
As Diana wrests control of her life we see her hire a journalist to take shots of her while pretending to have an affair with Dodi Fayed (Cas Anvar). She does this just to make Khan jealous as he was her one and true love. However, as Khan realises his mistake, it is too late — Diana has already become a victim of her fate. He is left heartbroken and as he lays flowers by Diana’s pictures, he leaves her a note: “Somewhere between right and wrong there is a garden. I will meet you there.” (Rumi). With this note he declares his love for her but it can only come now as salve for her soul.
The film does a good job of encapsulating the life of a princess, as a mother, as a lover and as a social worker. Because it opens in the post-Charles period of her life its focus is not on her role as a wife, mother and princess of Wales. Instead it zooms in on her from a more human perspective. We see the enormous compassion she displayed in her contributions for humanitarian causes and the sacrifices she made in her personal relationships. We even see her cleaning her lover’s flat. We understand, however, that a public figure cannot have the privilege of a leading a normal, private life, a contention that arises many times between Khan and Diana and finally severs their relationship.
The script is rich and well done. Khan says to Diana at the start of their relationship, “You don’t perform the operation. The operation performs you.” And another dead winner also comes from him: “The hard part is receiving love.”
As can be expected, the film has not been well received in certain quarters. Diana’s former butler, Paul Burrell, refuses to watch it. “Why would I want to see a fictitious incarnation of a world I was a part of?” he argues.
Burrell has been a source of information on Diana’s life. He has spoken of how Diana and Khan met at London’s Royal Brompton Hospital and developed, according to him, “an immediate connection”.
Diana apparently told Burrell: “You’ll never guess what happened today. I was in the hospital lift going up. The door opened and there was the most adorable man you could ever wish to meet standing there in a doctor’s coat. The moment I looked into his eyes I knew that man was for me.”
She said: “I have to get to know this man.”
And the more she got to know him, the deeper in love she fell.