With Academy Award nominations to be announced in a few weeks and more Bollywood movies being made each year than Hollywood ones, one may wonder what is happening with the film scene close to home. Lollywood has dried up it seems, so what is the future of the Pakistani film industry? However, before exploring the future, it's worthwhile to look back into the past.
Get Real By Sumera S. Naqvi |
It is just beyond comprehension for ordinary Pakistani women to see how removed from reality the local heroine looks -- irritatingly naïve and an emotional bimbo, who has nothing else to do in life than to fall in love. Well, welcome to the real world where education for women has become more than just an 'Inter course', if you know what I mean.Unlike the Pakistani woman who has reached (some) places, the hapless Pakistani heroine has just not kept up with modern times. After watching the frustrating soaps on TV channels and the Pakistani films (particularly) you come to the conclusion that Pakistani heroines still have a long way to go. They are entirely different from the real woman who is trying her level best to keep afloat on all fronts and, admirably, is making a go of it.Understandably films are meant to be fiction, but the exaggeration meant to support a point of view is blown way out of proportion. A case in point is the recent Pakistani hit which forced me to doubt my own existence as a 'practical woman' who worries about bills more than love. Am I not in line with reality? Should we be waiting for a knight in shining armour all our lives, even if he has alredy married someone else? Or even when one has met one, should he stand at the gate guarding our safety while we sleep coccooned in the wraps of safety? Though Pakistani women still have to go a long way, the roly-poly, absurd, out of sync lass should (please) be considered an out-dated story. Women are seen in all professions, including the media itself, and I am sure the film-writers, producers and directors of such films are also noticing them. However, somehow they have failed to register the new genre of women who are proving their mettle in various fields. Well, like it or not, the Pakistani heroine should wake up to the scorching daylight; the realisation that everything needs to be paid for in the contemporary world, even a sated evening (a date to be more precise) filled with love and romance. The new woman is ready to chip in with the household expenditures. But sadly this reality is not shown on the silver screen. I am not discounting the fact that the fictitious |
A thriving film industry





























