

#Jane stork ma shanti b series#
The choice of music for the series is definitely worth mentioning, with the songs seamlessly blending into the narrative and livening it up. The editing is precise and the hour long episodes end at the right moments to make one look forward for the next one. The director duo, Mark Duplass and Jay Duplass uses a wealth of archival footage and the original recordings of the Rajneesh followers, mixing them with the present day interviews of the key players in the drama, putting together an exciting narrative in front of the viewers.


The final outcome of the chain of events was Osho’s exit from the United States in 1985. These result in various incidents like political maneuvering, bombing, mass poisoning and murder attempts of senior Government officials. The human tendency to be unable to accept something different from their own social setup results in a series of escalating incidents creating extreme friction between the original habitats and newcomers. The life of the residents of Antelope, the quiet rural city in Oregon was turned upside down as the Rajneesh followers started coming into their city, building up a huge ranch to set up the city of Rajneeshpuram. It allows the viewers to form their own judgement on frailties of human behavior as various scenarios from multiple viewpoints are skillfully presented before us. The series presents to the viewer the rather weird series of events taking place around the Guru, in Wasco County of the Oregan state in America in the 1980s. Wild Wild Country offers a view into a particular chapter in the last phases of the life of Osho or Acharya Rajneesh, an Indian guru of the last century, who was unconventional in many of his approaches. Many in the west look towards the east which, with its thousands of years of rich traditions has the necessary knowledge to guide us towards the spiritual dimensions of life. It is then that people start to explore faith, religion, spirituality and the spiritual gurus come in to provide a sense of direction. In the never ending run to pursue more and more happiness one often gets disenchanted and somewhere the urge to explore the deeper dimensions of life rises. The human being is a marvel of creation, the depths of which remain mostly unexplored in the present world.
