Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

Good news for Pakistan and best of luck to her. People like Sharmeen are the true face of Pakistan! We are proud of you!!!

http://www.dawn.com/2012/01/24/sharmeen-obaid-chinoy-is-pakistan’s-first-oscar-nominee.html

Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy is Pakistan’s first Oscar nominee

Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy became the first Pakistani filmmaker to earn an Oscar nomination with her film Saving face, which was nominated in the “Documentary, short film” category as the Oscar nominations were released on Tuesday.

****Obaid, who has directed several documentary films, won an Emmy award in 2010 for her documentary Pakistan: Children of the Taliban.

****Saving face, which the Karachi-based filmmaker has co-directed with Daniel Junge, depicts the life of a British Pakistani plastic surgeon who donates his time to heal acid victims in Pakistan.
**
The film is set to be released in March this year, while the Oscars will be held on February 26.

Re: Pakistan’s First Oscar Nominee

http://www.dawn.com/2012/01/24/in-conversation-with-sharmeen-obaid-chinoy.html

In conversation with Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
**Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy is bold. She seeks stories that touch the heart and turns them into movies that break it. Having worked on subjects ranging from child abuse, violence against women, terrorism and natural disasters, Chinoy is passionate about films and views everything through a human mind and yet with the lens of her camera.

****From being a brilliant journalist, to an established filmmaker, Chinoy has come a long way. After becoming the first Pakistani to win an Emmy Award, the first non-US citizen to win the Livingston Award for Young Journalist, she has now become the firstPakistani individual to earn an Oscar nomination.

Last October, Chinoy revealed that her documentary Saving Face had entered the shortlist of Best Documentary (short film) category for the Oscars.

Here, she talks to Dawn.com about the long journey to the Oscars, moments after the Oscar nominations were revealed.

**What was it that motivated you to work on this subject, which continues to be neglected in the mainstream media?
**
The film chronicles the work of acclaimed British Pakistani plastic surgeon, Dr Mohammad Jawad as he travelled to Pakistan and performed reconstructive surgery on survivors of acid violence. There my co-director, Daniel Junge suggested that we should make a documentary on this. I was sold in an instant, since I personally feel that acid attacks are the worst form of violence, I stuck to the idea and was determined to show the world the process a woman goes through after this hideous act. I would also like to thank the women for the resilience, patience and dedication they showed throughout the filming of this documentary.

**The movie is shot entirely in the Seraiki belt. How common are acid attacks in that part of the country?
**
The Seraiki belt is sadly the most backward and conservative area of Pakistan, where torturing women is not considered a crime.

**What have your critics said about the documentary and its nomination now?
**
It has been released only in American cinemas and has received a great response so far. Regarding the nomination [chuckles], it has just been an hour since the nominations came out so no criticism yet.

**Do you have any plans to follow the lives of these victims?
**
Yes we have a complete program ready for this. We will be reaching out through a nationwide program, where we will screen this documentary and encourage the victims to speak at local colleges and schools in order to spread awareness. Also, we will be working with international organisations to provide the victims with skills through training programs and there are plans to rehabilitate some of these women.

**What is the status of Taboo Beauty?
**
Taboo Beauty has been renamed to *Transgenders: Pakistan’s Open Secret *and has already been screened in the UK.

**When and how does the Pakistani public get to see Saving Face?
**
The film will be aired on March 8 by HBO, which will be followed by screening in selected cinemas across Pakistan.

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

Correction: This isn't the first Oscar nominee. Students of FAST had already provided animation & editing for some movie and they won an oscar for it as well. need to google it ...

Re: Pakistan’s First Oscar Nominee

I think you are referring to this guy, he won oscars as part of some American movie…

http://www.pakvibes.com/articles/comments.php?id=46_0_1_0_C

Oscars 2008 were, well, a yawn to watch. But the prestige associated with the gold statues is still unsurpassed in cinema. And this year was significant in that a Pakistani managed to work on a film that not only picked up a prestigious Academy Award nomination but also won!
The man is Mir Zafar Ali, a visual effects specialist, and the film he worked for was the high-profile flick, The Golden Compass, starring Nicole Kidman and “Bond” man Daniel Craig.

The Golden Compass picked up the award for Best Visual Effects and Mir Zafar Ali was one of the ‘Effects Technical Director’ at Rhythm and Hues, the US-based company that worked on this particular film. Those of us who’ve seen the film do not recall a Pakistani man up onstage picking up the Oscar. And the only reason for that is that only the main four supervisors went and picked up the trophy.

However, Mir Zafar Ali is actually mentioned in the full credits of the film.

Academy Award isn’t his only accomplishment. The Golden Compass also managed to pick up a BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) Award as well.

Who is he?

Mir Zafar Ali is a not a naturalized American. Rather, he is a homegrown Pakistani. He studied computer sciences right here in Pakistan from BCCI FAST in Karachi. He then worked for quite a few companies here Sharp Image, Nucleus Studios and Carrot. His forte was always computer graphics and to refine it further he also did a course in sculpture from the Indus Valley School of Arts and Architecture in Karachi. He finally went to the US of A in 2000, where he enrolled at Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia and specialized in Visual Effects. And the rest, as they say, is history.

America is a country where talent is recognized. In 2003, soon after completing his BFA in Computer Animation, Mir Zafar Ali was offered a position at Digital Domain, which is known for its Visual Effects on films such as Titanic, Fight Club and The Fifth Element to name just a few. The first film he worked on there was The Day After Tomorrow on which he ran most of the water simulations.

Mir is the first Pakistani to have worked on a film to win an Oscar for the Best Visual Effects. Still at Rhythm & Hues, the big project he’s working on these days is The Incredible Hulk, featuring Edward Norton and Liv Tyler. It will be a big summer blockbuster, so watch out for it.

Mir Zafar Ali plans to continue working in the Visual Effects industry and intends to delve further into the development side and work in other areas of visual effects such as CG pipepine, shader writing, lighting and compositing.

The importance of being a brilliant behind the scenes man

With the emphasis on Special Effects in Hollywood, Mir Zafar Ali has followed his passion to a place where he can be at the cutting edge of technological breakthroughs. Indeed, the Oscar won by The Golden Compass validates the fact as to how far he has come to realizing that dream.

The unfortunate bit, however, is the fact that even as Mir Zafar Ali remains a well-known name in the digital business in the United States of America, his success story is one that many in Pakistan are simply unaware of.

When Indian filmmakers make it in Hollywood, their stories are written about and hyped to the skies in India and consequently abroad. But when it comes to a Pakistani success story such as Mir Zafar Ali, they remain in the shadows.

Part of the problem is the fact that it is only now that media has grown in Pakistan. What the growth of media does is that it causes a coming together of talent. So many Indian films employ Westerners to help them get the technicalities right. It is hoped that with the revival of cinema in Pakistan, there will be Pakistani films that will employ the talent of Mir Zafar Ali.

While it is important that talent like him hone their skills in the West, it is equally important that films in Pakistan are one day strong enough to claim him as our own.

Here’s to Mir Zafar Ali for making Pakistan proud. Now that The Golden Compass has won, maybe the Western media will realize that there are people in and from Pakistan who are talented and this country has a lot more to offer than it is credited for. %between%

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

Probably - him

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

Anybody saw Saving Face? Generally the west does not acknowledge anything coming from Pakistan unless it carries some anti-military/ISI and pro-Taliban stuff.

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

The article mentions it will be released in march.

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

Good news sharmeen chinoy wins oscars.

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

congrats.

Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

Congrats to her! :slight_smile:

Sharmeen Obaid wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims | Entertainment | DAWN.COM

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani filmmaker and first-time Oscar nominee Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy won an Academy Award on Monday for her documentary about acid attack victims, a first for a Pakistani director.

Her victory shines a spotlight on a subject which affects thousands of women in Pakistan and elsewhere, but which is seldom discussed at home.

In her acceptance speech, Chinoy dedicated the award to the women of Pakistan. “All the women in Pakistan working for change, don’t give up on your dreams, this is for you,” she said.

‘Saving Face’ chronicles the work of British Pakistani plastic surgeon Mohammad Jawad, who performed reconstructive surgery on survivors of acid attacks in Pakistan.

More than 100 people, mainly women and girls, are disfigured in acid attacks every year in Pakistan, although groups helping survivors say many more cases go unreported.

Pakistan is the world’s third-most dangerous country for women, after Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, based on a survey conducted last year by the Thomson Reuters Foundation (SPECIAL COVERAGE: The world’s most dangerous countries for women - TrustLaw), with acid attacks a common means of punishing alleged transgressions.

Victims are often permanently blinded, and their scar tissue can become infected with septicemia or gangrene.

“The women who decided to be a part of the documentary did so because they wanted to make their voices heard and wanted to bring attention to this form of assault,” Chinoy said in an interview conducted before she won the Oscar.

“The main reason that they are in ‘Saving Face’ is to make their stories heard and have an impact.”

Many victims are women attacked by their husbands, and others assaulted for turning down a proposal of marriage. One girl in the documentary describes how she was burned after rejecting the advances of her teacher. She was 13 at the time.

Another woman featured in the film is 25-year-old Rukhsana, whose husband threw acid on her and her sister-in-law doused her in gasoline before her mother-in-law lit a match and set her on fire.

Chinoy said she hopes the cases in her film will resonate for others in Pakistan.

“It is a story of hope with a powerful message for the Pakistani audience. I felt this would be a great way to show how Pakistanis can help other Pakistanis overcome their problems,” she said.

Chinoy’s films have won international acclaim. Her 2010 documentary, Pakistan’s Taliban Generation, won an International Emmy Award.

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

she is a great journalist. this should be a good film.


please name some of these movies from pakistan with "anti-military/ISI and pro-taliban stuff" that have been acknowledged by the West.

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

Well done, that should be the true face of Pakistan not those brainless mullahs who think that by killing innocent people they are serving humanity.

Congrats. :k:

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

she got Emmy awards for “Children of Taliban” last year…

FRONTLINE/World Conflict Zones: Pakistan and Afghanistan Synopsis and Video | PBS

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

:jhanda: :jhanda:

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

Shabash Sharmeen :jhanda:

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

Congrats ms chinoy and pakistan...

Re: Pakistan's First Oscar Nominee

I did not say anti-military/ISI movies, I said anti-military/ISI stuff.

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

Great day for Pakistan :clap:

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims

Why do we only recognize our talent after someone else recognizes it first? What a shame!

Anyway, congrats to her on bringing Pakistan's name to world stage in a positive way.

Re: Pakistani filmmaker, Sharmeen Obaid, wins Oscar for film on acid attack victims


probably because we don't have a talent/achievement recognition process in place, people like Rahman Malik get presidential awards i.e. 'andhaa baatay rewaRian apnon ko'.