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Is
cinema dead in Pakistan? Does it have a future? When asked such
questions, I am reminded of my father's speech at the opening of
Star Cinema nearly 26 years ago, when he said he should have asked
God for something other than a cinema, after migrating to Pakistan
from Bangladesh. After having survived blood, sweat, petrol bombs
and buckets of tears for longer than Jinnah's Pakistan, his fears
have come true, and only 43 of the 110 cinemas in Karachi survive
today.
Gone is
'Palace' - the cinema of the upper-class, renowned for dating; 'Plaza'
- the name is only familiar to people looking to get their cars
repaired; 'Regal' - half the city does not know where the area derived
its named from - and, of course, 'Lighthouse,' now the warm clothes
haven of Lunda Bazaar. Only the memory of what one saw, and with
whom, remains with those of my generation.
In
1971, we lost the larger half of Pakistan and with it, not just
a market for films, but also prospective Nadeems, Shabnams, Robin
Ghoshs, Nazrul Islams and the pioneering spirit of the producers
of the first colour and cinemascope films of Pakistan.
National
Film Development Corporation, better known as NAFDEC, which did
everything contrary to its raison d' etre, was the first salvo to
be fired at the cinema industry. Other than produce Khak aur Khoon
and fund dubious producers, it enjoyed a monopoly on the import
of films, but still lost money. Had its objective been to support
the intellectually corrupt, it would have been regarded as the most
successful of government departments.
In
1977, after having 'saved' the country, the benevolent dictator,
Zia-ul-Haq, cast his gaze upon the cinema of Pakistan and dug out
an old report by a film fact-finding committee that had been set
up by another one of his ilk in the early '60s, and adopted steps
that were outmoded. These included restricting the length of the
film, and stipulating arbitrary registration criteria. However,
the government did not reduce entertainment tax on cinema tickets,
which was recommended even in 1962 ,when cinema had no competition
from any other visual medium.
Then
came technology with its promise of a better tomorrow: colour television,
VCR, satellite channels, LD, DVD and cable, and as is their wont,
the bureaucrats did the predictable and continued to tax cinema
entertainment at 100 per cent, controlling ticket prices at six
rupees, while plays at posh hotels, tickets of which were priced
at a 100 rupees, were taxed at 10 per cent. Cinemas became less
and less profitable while property values soared. Many cinema owners
took the easy way out and left the business while the carpetbaggers
had a field day, showing blue films, evading entertainment duty
and overcharging - the euphemism for black-marketing. The third
category of exhibitors stoically struggled for survival, not letting
go of the ideals of their founding fathers, clinging to moral values
and letting their cinemas go to ruin with zero maintenance.
Finally,
when the government did do something - fixing entertainment tax
and easing control on admissions price - it was too little too late.
The
malaise that has now brought Pakistan's cinema to its knees is the
uncontrolled chori (piracy) of Indian and English language films,
which are being broadcast by cable and lead operators and exhibited
by schools, clubs and restaurants with the tacit approval of the
government. Cinema in Pakistan is emerging a loser and dying a painful
death. It is being relegated to the pages of history to be read
by our children .
The
argument most people give, many of whom have not been inside a cinema
for years, is that our movies are bad. Mea culpa, but one should
not pass judgement without seeing a film first. The only yardstick
of a successful film is how much money it makes. Just to give an
idea, Khatarnak and Maula Jutt are some of the success stories of
Pakistani cinema and Lamhe and Silsila are bombs of the best director
of the Indian cinema. The producers and directors of Pakistan don't
get up in the morning and leave home with the intent to make a bad
film that will flop at the box office. The government, the so-called
oracle of knowledge, is always stressing how films are managing
to do well the world over, in spite of cable television and videos
- a comment which should not even be dignified with a response.
But to keep the record straight, American films are not banned from
cinemas in the United Kingdom and simultaneously allowed to be shown
on cable and video, and that too, illegally. But then, intelligence
and integrity are disqualifications if one wants a job with our
government.
One
does not have to go very far to see the fruits of clamping down
on piracy. It's an hour and 40 minutes-long flight to Dubai, which
was once the hub of all piracy in the region with hardly 10 cinemas
left, and that too in dilapidated condition. Once the rulers realised
that they were making chors of their future generation, they clamped
down and their gain was our loss. The whole world of piracy moved
to Rainbow Centre, Karachi, while Dubai now has 70 top-class cinemas.
Our censor board says that they can only take action against legal
cinemas, not clubs, schools and restaurants, which illegally show
banned films, as these places are not licensed.
A former chairman of the Pakistan Censor Board even suggested
that he should censor films being shown by cable operators but was
speechless when asked under what law. PEMRA is only interested in
lining its own pockets and keeps harping about under-staffing and
other handicaps. An educated young man will not get a visa for further
studies, but the leading pirates travel without fear of being arrested.
The FBI warning on their films is just a joke fit for the spy vs.
spy section of MAD magazine.
At the risk of sermonising, our society must wake up to
the fact that films whether Indian or English, shown by cable operators
and sponsored by national and multi-national companies, are illegal,
and it does not matter how common the practice is. It will be illegal
till the laws are changed and no matter how much money is involved,
those guilty are still petty thieves.
Drastic steps should be taken to help cinema by way of stopping
piracy and, once and for all, deciding on the screening of Indian
films under a legal cover, so that a business which is providing
livelihood to thousands of people and contributing to the exchequer
can survive with dignity. Most importantly, the art of cinema should
be allowed to fulfil its role in helping integrate society and who
knows, one may find another Noorjehan, Mehdi Hasan, Rafi Peer, Hasan
Tariq and Babra Sharif for the boys and girls to lose their hearts
over. Not to mention Waheed Murad, who still gives me a tough time
when I ask my wife for a date.
When I walked out of the cinema I had helped build - which
was judged the best cinema in Pakistan three years ago at the Nigar
Film Awards - 25 years and nine months from the day I first walked
in for the opening on April Fool's day, these were the words that
followed me: Kis tamana sey tum ko chaha tha, Kis muhabbat sey haar
mani hai.
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