Khuda Ke Liye (threads merged)

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

another article from Jang

KARACHI: Shoaib Mansoor’s long-awaited film Khuda Kay Liye (In The Name of God) premiered on Sunday night at Karachi’s Prince cinema.

This is Geo Films’ first project and an effort to revive the cinema industry in Pakistan. The film will open throughout Pakistan on July 20. The path-breaking film stars Shaan, Iman Ali, Naseeruddin Shah and Fawad Khan.

An amazing mix of people came to watch the screening, including media professionals, artists, doctors, teachers, designers, Ulema, and even housewives among others. Among the celebrities present at the premiere included Javed Sheikh, Bushra Ansari, Behroze Sabzwari, Shakeel, Tapu Javeri, Saqib Malik, Deepak Perwani, Sonya Battla.

Of course, musicians were also there in full force. Rohail Hyatt — who’s mixed the background score— Ali Azmat, Salman Ahmed and Faakhir were just some of the most prominent musicians present. Shoaib Mansoor has ties that bind with the music industry. Indeed, Khuda Kay Liye sends out a clear message that music and Islam are not mutually exclusive.

Going by the crowd that gathered at the premiere, Khuda Kay Liye is arousing great curiosity. After the doors were opened and people took their seats, the hall was packed to its capacity of 700. The cheering began as soon as the credits started rolling. It just showed how much people wanted to see a film that is made by one of them, about them and for them. Khuda Kay Liye is all this and more.

Shoaib Mansoor has crafted a plot straight from the heart. It is a story of two brothers who are pop musicians in Lahore, one of whom gets radicalised under the influence of extremists, while the other goes to America and gets unlawfully detained after 9/11. It is the story of Mary (Maryam), a British girl of Pakistani origin, who is brought to Pakistan by her father and married off against her will.

Khuda Kay Liye is a film all Pakistanis can relate to. The stories that are shown remind us of real life headlines and it seems that every character in the film is someone we’ve all encountered at some point or another.

There were moments of magic in the film, lines that were said, scenes that were set up that touched the audience so much that they burst into spontaneous applause. And when Imran Aslam, President of the Geo Television Network, called Shoaib Mansoor on stage to take a bow at the end, he received a raucous standing ovation.

Two middle-aged women discussing the movie on their way out, said: “This movie is very timely. This is the kind of movie I want my children and everyone I know to watch, considering the state of the world today.”

Pop star Salman Ahmed said, “This movie reminded me that love always brings you to the right path. You can’t force ideology.” Ali Azmat predicted that this film “would change Pakistan.”

A young make-up artist, said: “This movie showed me that Pakistani cinema is still there! I would definitely come to a cinema to watch movies similar to this one.” Khuda Kay Liye is infinitely superior in every way to standard Lollywood fare.

The enthusiasm and excitement of the audience proves that a bright future for cinema is possible in Pakistan. It seemed that people are hungry for the essence of this land and culture to be distilled and projected on cinema screens, like it once was.

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

Now this is the educated community of Pakistan at the premiere. Its going to be interesting to see how the masses take it - especially since extremism is found more so among the masses than the elite.

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When are they going to release is it London? I wana show real patriotism n watch it in cinema lol :jhanda: :dhimpak:

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Expect this film to be the Dil Dil Pakistan of Pakistani cinema....the film that sets the benchmark for all future film making!

I expect a decent opening at most urban centers esp. Karachi and Lahore. The film should do well.

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[FONT=Trebuchet MS]Khuda Ke Liye! breathe life into cinema
[FONT=Trebuchet MS]
Rabia Noor

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THREE, two and one! Don’t get panicked, I am in my senses, actually it’s my reckoning. The countdown has just begun. You know what I am restlessly waiting for.

Exactly, it’s the one and only Khuda Key Liye. Yeah! It’s Shoaib Mansoor’s directional debut for Lollywood. Pakistani film Khuda Ke Liye starring Indian actor Naseeruddin Shah on the troth of a Muslim student after the 9/11 terror attacks in the US opened to an enthusiastic welcome in Karachi. Most of us are expecting a lot from the movie and considering it one to bring resurgence to the country’s film industry.

Pakistani director Shoaib Mansoor’s Khuda Ke Liye premiered Sunday night in Karachi and won great ovation after its screening.

I think it is quite ineluctable to mention here that the film’s release had been opposed by the clerics of the controversial Lal Masjid in Islamabad, which was the spot of military ‘Operation Silence’ last week.

The deputy cleric of the mosque, Abdul Rashid Ghazi (who is no more now), had warned against its release. He had asked for a censor committee including Muslim clergy and scholars to review the film. But now, Khuda Ke Liye is all set to release on July 20.

This is Shoaib Mansoor’s very first effort that deals with the Sept 11, 2001 terror attacks on the World Trade Centre in the United States.

Actors from Pakistan, India and the US have performed in the film. Lollywood style icon Shan has played the role of a Pakistani student who is arrested on the charges of connivance in 9/11. One of the Pakistan top models and television artiste Iman Ali makes her film debut in the movie. Her entry is being expected to be a successful one on big screen.

Renowned Indian actor Naseeruddin Shah has also played a unique role in the movie. He had himself produced Yun Hota Toh Kya Hota, a film touching upon 9/11. Fawwad, an emerging artiste also comes up with exceptionally amazing performance in this film.

Now I would love to share some interesting stuff about the music of ‘supposed-to-be’ fantabulous Khuda Ke Liye. It is really awesome. Last night I got a chance to listen a song Bandya from the film; it was simply ‘a phenomenon’, sung by Farah and Khawar. It was a good eldritch song, and was successful enough to revitalise a sound unearthly spirit in me. Ahmed Jahanzaib and Shujaat have worked for the music of Shoaib Mansoor’s debut movie.

The film pleads for a liberal approach towards religion. I haven’t yet seen the ‘said-to-be’ landmark film, but still after watching the directing skills and creativity of Shoaib Mansoor in the Supreme Ishq songs, I am damn sure he has done something eccentric and unconventional in the flick. Despite all of the controversies about the thematic representation of Islam in Khuda Ke Liye, I’ll suggest all of you to check it out to understand the truth on your own, and to decide would it help our almost-drowned film industry to perk up and revive the cinema in Pakistan?

Let’s hope for the best and wait for 20th July to see how winning Shoaib Mansoor will be to bring people back to the cinema.

For reviews and all out of the ordinary stuff about the cinema ventures of Khuda Ke Liye, all you have to do is, just keep posted. I’ll be back before long.

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

curtain raiser
**Raising a lantern over Pakistan’s dark night

The Khuda Kay Liye experience is one that has shattered stereotypes. Far beyond Saddar and the electronic market, where the elite hardly ever ventures out for an evening of

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entertainment, Prince Cinema was thronged by high society. Usually crowded with noisy rickshaws, shuffling chappals and chips wallahs, the road was overtaken by chauffer driven luxury cars, women in high heels and wafts of expensive cigars. The world turned out for the premiere of the most awaited film to be released in Pakistan in years. The trailors running on television had intrigued people enough: they were all dying to know what Khuda Kay Liye would be all about, and more importantly, would it actually be as controversial as it promised to be?

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It has shattered stereotypes because for a film that promised to revive cinema, the presence of film wallahs was overshadowed by the rest of the industry. That was evident in the turn out. Shan didn’t turn up for the premiere but Iman Ali and Fawad Khan, both of who have delivered extremely realistic performances in their lead roles, did. Meera and Reema were nowhere to be seen but television artists such as Javed Sheikh, Bushra Ansari, musicians like Rohail Hyatt, Ali Azmat, Salman Ahmad and from the fashion industry Sonya Battla, Deepak Perwani, Tapu Javeri, Umar Sayeed, Batul Rizvi, Sadaf Malaterre and many more came to share the glory of a man who has risen from television to save cinema.

High expectations that people came with must have weighed down heavy upon Shoaib Mansoor, but he showed none of the nervousness any other man would have felt under the circumstances. “I usually don’t say much,” he spoke to an emotional audience that gave him thunderous applause and rose to give him a standing ovation at the end of the screening, “but that doesn’t mean I don’t have much to say.”
Soft spoken and humble in his speech, the notoriously reclusive Shoaib Mansoor joined Imran Aslam on stage and thanked the cast and crew of Khuda Kay Liye, especially Naseeruddin

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Shah. “He wasn’t familiar with me or my work when I called him for the first time, but asked me for the script,” Shoaib Mansoor related. “It took the courier two days to get the script to Bombay and Naseeruddin Shah called back. ‘I like it,’ he said. ‘I’ll do it and I won’t take any money for it.’”
The impact that one glance through the script had on Naseeruddin Shah was the same as the impact KKL’s trailors had on the audience. The lobby was jam packed, shoulder to

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shoulder, invitees fanning themselves with the film passes, but not risking to step out for fresh air incase they missed a ‘moment’. There was a buzz of caution in the air too - the heavy security outside the cinema hall bundled with metal detecting gates and the fact that the film had picked up on an extremely controversial theme promised that.
Khuda Kay Liye is no average, formula flick. It is a film that raises issues and poses questions to the audience and that too about the most taboo topic in Pakistan – religion. Would it bash the mullahs or bash the liberals? Would it end happily or tragically and most importantly, would Shoaib Mansoor be brave enough to give it a conclusion at all or leave the end in mid air? As it turned out, he did all that and more.

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As the crowd was gradually ushered into the cinema hall and the opening credits rolled, one realized that Khuda Kay Liye was going to be an extraordinary film. The mood had been set and the audience sat and watched with an open mind, bursting out in applause at the slightest trigger. It was a film everyone could identify to; it reconstructed moments that every Pakistani at home or abroad has been through. The dilemma of what Islam permits and what it prohibits; the definition and difference between a good Muslim and a good human being. It captures a Pakistani boy’s vision out into the world and the world’s vision into Pakistan.

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“I love America. I am not a terrorist!” screams Mansoor (played by Shan) who has come to the USA to study music and is taken in by the FBI post 9/11.
“All Muslims may not be terrorists,” replies the agent, “but all terrorists are Muslim.” The film highlights the transition of the world view on Muslims and how they transform from being the “mujahideen” to the “terrorists”. KKL

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reveals how Mansoor’s “I Love USA” becomes “I Love USAMA” because that’s the light American authorities want to see him in.
The audience sat glued to their seats, through the soul searching songs and the life threatening moments. Within the first ten minutes of the film, when Muslim radicals were shown breaking on to a stage being pepped up for a music concert and tearing it down, one actually believed the film to have the same impact on extremists outside. One actually expected shouts of condemnation and cries for censorship from within or outside the cinema hall. It went safe

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and sound as the premises was highly protected but KKL made one wonder how the masses would react to seeing their religious leaders in the light of reality. No one has dared show what Khuda Kay Liye does.
The film has suspense, it has traces of romance and meaningful music, it has vision and most importantly it has soul. The audience reacted accordingly – their laughter, silence and sighs of exclamation came at the same time. Half way through, when the vendors brought in complimentary drinks and bags of popcorn, one could hardly believe that half time was up. For its three hour duration, KKL seemed to go by in a flash

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

Excellent!

Shoaib Mansoor is still hiding from the limelight…:smack:
Imagine what any other producer under GEO marketing and adv campaigns would have done by now…we would have been eating, drinking, sleeping him, but Shoaib Marvellous Mansoor is clearly a man apart…

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cadet,

did you buy them? For Prince or Cineplex? How much? and is it really this rushed up? are tickest available or short for first show on 20 Jul now?

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Who is with Fawad in the pic ? Is tht his wife :hmmm:

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look at shan, he's not at the premier, he hasn' said a word about the film. lol shan is unbelievable.

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the ticket cost 150 Rs. .... lekin i guess pehley aur doosrey din kee bookin abhi chal rahee hai ....

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

Aw, any news on locations of its release in the US ?

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

Listen to the sound track…

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Mai ne 5 tickets liya hain (150 Rs per ticket) Saturday 6 to 9 k :)
wesay apas ki baat hai Prince cinema ka ticker counter wala buhat kamina tha......Nakhray kar raha tha k timmings khatam hogai hai.....phir jab tight kara us ko tu dia us ne ticket.

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i'll definitely watch this movie

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

sahee kaha ... uss ney merey saath bhi gand kerney kee koshish kee thee .. mein to 17 tickets ley raha tha :P .. neways i'll be there too on staurday 6-9 ....

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

Brothers,we can not watch in distant towns in north america.So please give us a link to download.The link must not be rapid share or megauploadbecause these does not work in office/buissiness setting here.thanks

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Bandya is the most beautiful song :love:

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

Why are they showing attitude? :aq:

Re: Pakistani Movie: Khuda Ke Liye (merged)

I think 'geet Humarey Hi' will emerge the biggest hit.

I like it best and the first video released is it too.

It's also got that nostalgic Vital Signsish composition and sound as well as music. Deeply Shoaib Mansoor.