Pakistani director wants to inject some horror into local film industry

A Pakistani filmmaker is getting unprecedented attention with a movie based on his own favoured Hollywood fare — horror flicks.

Omar Ali Khan, director of Zibahkhana (Hell’s Ground), describes his film as “a very low budget, scuzzy, rough-edged, cheesy little horror film.”

But he thinks it’s a badly needed antidote to what’s being churned out by Lollywood, Pakistan’s declining film industry, which produces poor imitations of Bollywood-style movies with worn-out plots and tired song and dance numbers.

The local film industry has appealed for government help, but Khan’s goal is merely to get his film into cinemas and “entertain the pants off people.”

Hell’s Ground premiered in March at Denmark’s biggest film festival and was shown at the Philadelphia Film Festival.

However, it has yet to be cleared by Pakistani censors for official screening. Khan hopes for an August release date.

“We’d like to rock the movie scene here. Our film demolishes all the traditional film-making barriers in Pakistan,” Khan said. “We hope it will inspire some to take more risks.”

Hell’s Ground was cheered at sold-out unofficial screenings in Pakistan and, with its Hollywood ethic, it is getting a lot of attention from the Western media.

“We had zero expectations,” said Khan, who studied film in the U.S. and is a fan of old horror movies such as My Bloody Valentine and Creature from the Black Lagoon.

The film centres on five jeans-clad teenagers who cut classes, then lose their way en-route to a rock concert.

The story unfolds with blood, gore and a measure of humour as they stumble across a psychotic family, zombies and a cannibalistic killer dressed in a burqa, the head-to-toe robe worn by women in conservative Muslim communities.

The director says there’s a reflection of contemporary values in its depiction of Westernized, urbanized Pakistani youth who find themselves aliens in Pakistan’s still mainly rural culture.

Source: CBC.ca

Re: Pakistani director wants to inject some horror into local film industry

It'll be a nice change to those dancing bhens (buffalos) and those ugly moustached-mucharrs, I think Lollywood (what a gay name) should lay off romantic flicks till it can produce something as decent as India.

Horror is a nice genre.

Re: Pakistani director wants to inject some horror into local film industry

Yeah - I hope it doesn't flop just because its too close in release to Khuda Ke Liye, and maybe Ramchand Pakistani.

That's gonna be cool - lots of movies being released in a short amount of time that are worth watching. Might motivate other people to hurry and get their movies produced.

Re: Pakistani director wants to inject some horror into local film industry

There have been horror movies made in Pakistan before, I remember a Pushto movie. I remember seeing ads for them in the back of Urdu newspapers. Usually involved lot of tight clothing and clevage shots.

Re: Pakistani director wants to inject some horror into local film industry

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The older Pashto movies are quite provocative, I think Pakistani societies in general have become more and more conservative whereas with other socities such as Indians it's an opposite trend.