The Oscars and Pakistani cinema

From Indpaedia
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
 
 
 
=Pakistan’s official entries under the foreign language film category=
 
=Pakistan’s official entries under the foreign language film category=
 
==1959, 1963==
 
==1959, 1963==
Line 21: Line 18:
  
 
Further reports by the media quote debutant British-Pakistani director Hammad Khan, whose film Slackistan was banned in Pakistan. He said that Pakistan has been so pre occupied with wars, coups and religion that cinema really has no place in the country nor has it taken the art form seriously.
 
Further reports by the media quote debutant British-Pakistani director Hammad Khan, whose film Slackistan was banned in Pakistan. He said that Pakistan has been so pre occupied with wars, coups and religion that cinema really has no place in the country nor has it taken the art form seriously.
 
+
[[Category:Pakistan|OTHE OSCARS AND SOUTH ASIAN CINEMATHE OSCARS AND SOUTH ASIAN CINEMATHE OSCARS AND SOUTH ASIAN CINEMA
 +
THE OSCARS AND SOUTH ASIAN CINEMA]]
 
[[Category:Cinema-TV-Pop|O
 
[[Category:Cinema-TV-Pop|O
 +
THE OSCARS AND PAKISTANI CINEMA]]
 +
 +
[[Category:Cinema-TV-Pop|OTHE OSCARS AND PAKISTANI CINEMA
 
THE OSCARS AND PAKISTANI CINEMA]]
 
THE OSCARS AND PAKISTANI CINEMA]]

Latest revision as of 20:45, 24 January 2023

[edit] Pakistan’s official entries under the foreign language film category

[edit] 1959, 1963

50 years later, Pakistan to submit Oscar entry

TNN | Aug 3, 2013

The Times of India Between 1947 and 2013 Pakistan sent two entries to the Oscars:

1959 (Akhtar Kardar's Jago Hua Savera)

1963 (Khwaja Khurshid Anwar's Ghunghat).

[edit] 2013: The committee constituted to select Pakistan's official entry

From Pakistan, renowned film makers and writers will join hands to form a part of the core selection committee.

Heading the committee are prominent people including writer Mohsin Hamid (The Reluctant Fundamentalist), director Mehreen Jabbar (Ramchand Pakistani), actor Rahat Kazmi, filmmaker Akifa Mian, Samina Peerzada and arts academic Framji Minwalla.

Further reports by the media quote debutant British-Pakistani director Hammad Khan, whose film Slackistan was banned in Pakistan. He said that Pakistan has been so pre occupied with wars, coups and religion that cinema really has no place in the country nor has it taken the art form seriously.

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Translate