He's the captain of the ship. He's a man that has a phenomenal physcological problem because he thinks Moby Dick, a blue whale is after him. Increasing of violence, captain (Aham or Ahab, which ever they both seem correct) his crew starts to fall back behind him, judging weather or not his sanity is right or wrong. One of the crew remarks that the captain has completely lost it, telling the captain that he needs to lay rest to his vengeance on the animal or he will end up regretting more than he thinks. Unfortunately (Aham or Ahab) being a man wont stand for that reasoning, he will do anything to kill Moby Dick. I think in a chapter or two he starts threatening to send crew members over board for mutiny. The crew starts becoming restless and sick until finally Moby Dick comes within reach, I am not sure if Aham or Ahab gets killed but I am positive that one of the crew members says to him, "Now that you killed the beast of your nightmares, how do you feel?", and I believe the response was, "I regret it".
Don't shoot me if half of my information was wrong alright. All i know is of what I heard in Resource class but trust me most of my information was legit, God I heard enough of it anyways to claim that fact.
Oh and just a little hint, in a commercial they pronounced the captains name as A-ham, unfortunatly without saying the captain's name is most likely A-hab but either way I still think A-ham sounds more likely then anything.
Aham - film - was created in 1992.
aham i8s 27
Paul Aham is 5' 10 1/2".
Punyam Aham was created on 2010-01-22.
Paul Aham was born on July 17, 1967, in France.
Punyam Aham - 2010 is rated/received certificates of: India:U/A
The cast of Aham Premasmi - 2005 includes: Aarti Chhabria as Apsara
The cast of Aham - 1992 includes: Urvashi Mohanlal as Siddarthan Suresh Gopi Ramya Krishnan Nedumudi Venu
The Sanskrit word for 'self' or 'I' is "ātman" or "aham."
aham aathhvi kakshaayaam asmi
In Sanskrit, you can write "I was born" as "जातः अहम्" (jātaḥ aham).
You can write "I am bliss" in Sanskrit as "अहमानन्दः अस्मि" (aham ānandaḥ asmi).