Movie: Ramchand Pakistani

Posted on July 25, 2008
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People, TV, Movies & Theatre
22 Comments
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Adil Najam

Ramchand Pakistan, a Mehreen Jabbar FlmI have not yet seen the new Batman movie (The Dark Knight) that everyone is talking about, but the movie I would really really like to see right now is Mehreen Jabbar’s maiden feature film release, Ramchand Pakistani.

Of course, the fact that it is produced and written by Javed Jabbar, one of my favorite people and someone who has always shown me great kindness and encouragement, peaks my curiosity. But it very much a project of his daughter, Mehreen Jabbar, an acclaimed film-maker in her own right. But most of all I am dying to see Ramchand Pakistani because every review I have read of it and ever promo clip I have seen reminds me of what is now one of my all-time favorite movies, Khamosh Paani (Silent Waters).

Ramchand Pakistan, a Mehreen Jabbar Flm

I have been hearing wonderful things about it for the last couple of years while it was being made, and three people who did see it recently when it was screened in Pakistan have nothing but praise for the sensitivity with which a difficult subject has been tackled but also the visual and artistic content. It was recently released in Pakistan, but just after I had left.

Ramchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen Jabbar

The film’s website describes the essentials of the story, thus:

Ramchand Pakistan, a film by Mehreen JabbarRamchand Pakistani is derived from a true story concerning the accidental crossing of the Pakistan-Indian border during a period (June 2002) of extreme, war-like tension between the two countries by two members of a Pakistani Hindu family belonging to the ‘untouchable’ (Dalit) caste, and the extraordinary consequences of this unintended action upon the lives of a woman, a man, and their son.

The singular theme of the film is how a child from Pakistan aged eight years learns to cope with the trauma of forced separation from his mother while being held prisoner, along with his father in the jail of a country i.e. India, which is hostile to his own, while on the other side of the border, the wife-mother, devastated by their sudden disappearance builds a new chapter of her life, by her solitary struggle for sheer survival.

The film portrays the lives of a family that is at the bottom of a discriminatory religious ladder and an insensitive social system, which is nevertheless tolerant, inclusive and pluralist. The irony is compounded by the fact that such a family becomes hostage to the acrimonious political relationship between two neighbor-states poised on the brink of war.

But the real power of the human story comes from something that was captured well in the film notes post at the Tribeca Film Festival site:

The most haunting frame of Ramchand Pakistani may be its first. Over a black screen, the words appear: adapted from actual events. The world is full of mad facts, but among the maddest is that in 2002, as Indian and Pakistani troops massed against each other on the countries’ border, an eight-year-old boy named Ramchand wandered over the invisible line separating his own side of the desert from that of India’s and was taken prisoner. Going in search of Ramchand, his father followed him across and was captured as well. They were held in an overcrowded Indian jail for five years.

The film is clearly Mehreen’s, but equally clearly the story has Javed Jabbar all over it. Of course the story idea and writing was his, but anyone who knows him and his passion (for film; he produced and directed Pakistan’s first full-length cinema film in English: “Beyond the Last Mountain,” 1976) and his lasting interest and in the Thar region can see that it is more thanjust genes that he has given his daughter. Reviews seem to rave about Mehreen Jabbar’s directorial talents and also about the cinematography of Sofian Khan. The songs from Shubha Mudgal and Shafqat Amanat Ali Khan are themselves making waves. Most of all, the reviewers seem to be totally charmed by the seven-and-half year old Syed Fazal Hussain who played the lead role of Ramchand Pakistani. As the Tribeca site puts it, “Syed Fazal Hussain proves one of those miracle discoveries – he’s a real kid, all piss and vinegar and shaking vulnerabilities-and Jabbar does well to dwell on his face as much as she does.” All of these are yet more reasons why I really really want to see the movie.

If you have already seen it, do let us know what you thought.

(Note, other ATP movie posts of interest: Jinnah-The Movie, Man Push Cart, Kala Pul, Kaanch, Khuda key Liye, Charlie Wilson’s War, Son of a Lion)

22 responses to “Movie: Ramchand Pakistani”

  1. JJ says:

    The movie was fantastic. It is a MUST SEE !!!

  2. A. Jadoon says:

    I will reserve judgement until I actually see the movie, but yes the reviews are good and the topic is a very important one. For too long our two countries have systematically taught our people to distrust each other. Whatever the politics, the lives of ordinary people like this family in the movie gets messed up. So for the topic alone I also am really looking forward to Ramchand Pakistani.

  3. Shahid Akhtar says:

    I was lucky to have seen this movie at The TriBecca Film Festival in New York and really enjoyed it. Nandita and other cast members did a great job, and with Mehreen at the helm, the cinemaotography and the minor intense touches were wonderful to watch. This movie has beautiful scenery and is stunningly picturized. The audience in New York gave it a standing ovation. A must-see movie.

  4. Azmatullah says:

    This looks like an excellent effort and an important topic. As teh review in teh writeup wrote, what is most powerful is teh fact that thsi is an true story. That is what is really sad. Thank you for doing teh movie, Mehreen Jabbar.

  5. Naseer says:

    – Adil Najam,
    Yes, We are all awaiting the release of the film on 1st August.
    Though I am not a very enthusiastic movie goer, but for this movie by Mehreen Jabbar and the reason Javed Jabbar is my alma mater (Public School, Karachi Cantt), very senior to me and now the main organizer of our school’s golden jubilee celebrations to be held shortly.
    I remember the making of Javed Jabbar’s first film “Beyond the Last Mountain”, a scene of which was shot in Karachi University,1973 and we were asked to walk the Library stairs(just that)for 10 minutes.
    Those were the days.
    Sincerely
    Naseer

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