The raging wave of suicide bombings and attacks, some in reprisal for the military operations against local Taliban, are casting their shadow over cultural, film and showbiz activities in the country.Lahore, the cultural capital and the center of Pakistan’s film industry, which is locally known as Lollywood, is the hardest hit.Producers and actors are shattered. They have lost their confidence," Khalid Farshori, a senior cultural reporter, told IslamOnline.net.Many of them have personally told me that they are thinking of joining other professions to earn their livelihood.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Violence Hits Pakistan's Lollywood
The raging wave of suicide bombings and attacks, some in reprisal for the military operations against local Taliban, are casting their shadow over cultural, film and showbiz activities in the country.Lahore, the cultural capital and the center of Pakistan’s film industry, which is locally known as Lollywood, is the hardest hit.Producers and actors are shattered. They have lost their confidence," Khalid Farshori, a senior cultural reporter, told IslamOnline.net.Many of them have personally told me that they are thinking of joining other professions to earn their livelihood.
Posted by Film Industry and Theatre Crisis in Pakistan at 10:10 AM 0 comments
Labels: lollywood, taliban, terror attacks, violence
Obscene Mujras have destroyed Lahore’s commercial theatre
Lahore was renowned for its experimental theatre and led the country’s art scene with its sizeable creed of artists, writers and directors. And, whilst that parallel culture of serious theatre is present, it has been sidelined by a crass and commercial brand of entertainment that was earlier popular for the lewd Punjabi jokes.However, the newest brand consolidated during the 1990s has integrated the old Mujra form albeit in its destroyed shape. What has been the effect of this trend: women, children and families are not found in theatre halls. The larger purpose of theatre as an inclusive form of entertainment, interaction and participation is all decaying. Such is the impact of greed and commercialism. Commercial theatre is now a preserve for the oversexed, possibly under-laid male Lahoris; and rich men from the outskirts come to get a visual-lay to be supplemented by a real one besides the grand old mosque. Mohammad Fawad Riaz
Posted by Film Industry and Theatre Crisis in Pakistan at 9:52 AM 0 comments
Labels: Commercial, Obscene.Mujras, Theatre
Upcoming Films in cinemas
By Khizer Shahid