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India, Pakistan cross a rubicon with
'Taare Zameen Par'
By
Muhammad Najeeb
Islamabad,
April 11 (IANS) India and Pakistan crossed another milestone Friday
with the popular Bollywood film "Taare Zameen Par" being
released in 19 halls across the country, the first after the government
here gave in to the long standing demand of cinema owners to allow
the screening of Indian movies.
Popular Indian actor Aamir Khan's directorial debut about a dyslexic
child is the first Indian film after the Pakistani government
allowed Indian movies to be screened. Earlier, permission was
given only for specific films.
The screening of Indian movies in Pakistan stopped after the
1965 war but certain films were allowed by different governments
- the classic "Mughal-e-Azam" for instance. Now, all
Indian movies can be screened in Pakistan after clearance by the
government-controlled censor board.
With the two often hostile neighbours sharing bonds of culture
and language, film lovers and industry insiders here say "Taare
Zameen Par" represents a "golden era" of exchange
of films and can be a major step towards long-lasting peace in
the region.
"This is good for the industry but best for the people of
the two countries," actor-director Samina Pirzada told IANS.
According to her, the way people had been waiting for "Taare
Zameen Par" indicated that the film was going to be a huge
hit in Pakistan.
Cinema owners said Indian films, which have always been hugely
popular in Pakistan with a thriving trade in pirated DVDs and
CDs, were like a life saving drug for their dying businesses.
In the absence of locally produced quality films, many had converting
their cinemas to shopping plazas, parking lots and even CNG and
petrol stations.
"I think now is the time that we should continue with the
cinema business," said Afsar Khan, manager of Xeros Productions.
There is a flip side too.
There were some who fear that the unconditional import of Indian
films would expedite the demise of the Pakistani industry. Many
film directors, actors, choreographers, technicians and other
support staff said high-quality movies from India could render
them useless.
"I welcome this move of showing Indian films in Pakistan
but I believe that this should be reciprocal and our films should
be shown in India," said Pirzada, confident that the quality
of Pakistani films would improve once Indian cinemas start screening
them.
"Khuda Kay Liye", a Pakistani film by director Shoaib
Mansoor, is being screened in India these days to a widely appreciative
audience.
According to Shahzad Gul, owner of Evernew Studios, Lahore, even
a random visit to a film studio would expose how the industry
was fighting for survival.
"You will find them stranded, in search of a job and desperate,"
he said.
Pakistani film studios, he said, had never been utilised to the
full. Even during a boom, only 60-70 percent of the facilities
were used. This had now dipped to a mere one to two percent.
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