Zibago
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Is the revival of Pakistani cinema sustainable?
Local filmmakers have changed the face of Pakistani cinema in 2015 but more is needed to make the revival sustainable.
Illustration by Creative Unit.
Pakistani cinema has reached the tipping point. With a record 11 local films (10 feature films and one animated film) in 2015, at least three of which were massive hits, the long sought after revival of local cinema has happened.
Gone are the days of the gujjars and gandaasas, seamlessly replaced by a mix of artsy biopics, big budget entertainers, kitschy coming of age numbers and rollicking, if raunchy, comedies. Decrepit and dingy cinema halls have been traded in for slick cineplexes equipped with plush seats, modern technology and the promise of a film ‘experience’. Going to the cinema has become not only an acceptable but a desirable activity as well, and the choices, whether in terms of show times, cinema locations or the films themselves, are extensive. For a country where an entire generation grew up without ever having seen the inside of a cinema, a new cinema going culture has arrived and is by all accounts being embraced with the greatest of enthusiasm.
The lifting of the ban on the import of Indian films in 2009 can safely be credited with bringing about the greatest change to Pakistan’s cinema environment. Prior to this, film supply was so limited that there was no business case for establishing a cinema, and in the absence of cinema halls to screen films in, producing local films was out of the question.
Mohsin Yaseen, GM Marketing at Cinepax Cinemas, which owns 22 of the 83 screens in Pakistan, says that when the owners of Cinepax thought of building a cinema in 2005, they knew they would have to create the supply chain first. So they established a distribution company called Box Office (now Footprint) and became the official distributors of Sony, Paramount and Universal in Pakistan. This gave them a much needed boost and they started building a cineplex in Rawalpindi but it wasn’t until the import of Indian films began that the expansion began in earnest.
Local filmmakers have changed the face of Pakistani cinema in 2015 but more is needed to make the revival sustainable.
Illustration by Creative Unit.
Pakistani cinema has reached the tipping point. With a record 11 local films (10 feature films and one animated film) in 2015, at least three of which were massive hits, the long sought after revival of local cinema has happened.
Gone are the days of the gujjars and gandaasas, seamlessly replaced by a mix of artsy biopics, big budget entertainers, kitschy coming of age numbers and rollicking, if raunchy, comedies. Decrepit and dingy cinema halls have been traded in for slick cineplexes equipped with plush seats, modern technology and the promise of a film ‘experience’. Going to the cinema has become not only an acceptable but a desirable activity as well, and the choices, whether in terms of show times, cinema locations or the films themselves, are extensive. For a country where an entire generation grew up without ever having seen the inside of a cinema, a new cinema going culture has arrived and is by all accounts being embraced with the greatest of enthusiasm.
The lifting of the ban on the import of Indian films in 2009 can safely be credited with bringing about the greatest change to Pakistan’s cinema environment. Prior to this, film supply was so limited that there was no business case for establishing a cinema, and in the absence of cinema halls to screen films in, producing local films was out of the question.
Mohsin Yaseen, GM Marketing at Cinepax Cinemas, which owns 22 of the 83 screens in Pakistan, says that when the owners of Cinepax thought of building a cinema in 2005, they knew they would have to create the supply chain first. So they established a distribution company called Box Office (now Footprint) and became the official distributors of Sony, Paramount and Universal in Pakistan. This gave them a much needed boost and they started building a cineplex in Rawalpindi but it wasn’t until the import of Indian films began that the expansion began in earnest.
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