My Pure Land | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sarmad Masud |
Written by | Sarmad Masud |
Produced by | Bill Kenwright |
Starring | Suhaee Abro Salman Ahmed Khan Razia Malik Tayyab Ifzal Eman Fatima |
Cinematography | Haider Zafar |
Edited by | Olly Stothert |
Music by | Tristan Cassel-Delavois |
Distributed by | Bill Kenwright Films |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 92 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | Urdu |
Box office | $17,157 [1] [2] |
My Pure Land is a 2017 Urdu-language British drama film directed by British Pakistani filmmaker Sarmad Masud. [3] It was selected as the British entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated. [4] It was the first time the United Kingdom had submitted an Urdu-language film. [5]
British-Pakistani filmmaker Sarmad (Sam) Masud, born in Bradford to immigrant parents, based the film on the life of Nazo Dharejo, after reading a 2012 story in The Express Tribune that called her "the toughest woman in Sindh." [6] [7] [8] Masud describes the film as "a modern-day feminist Western set in Pakistan, based on the extraordinary true story of one woman and her family who defended their home and land from 200 bandits." [9]
Nazo Dharejo lives on a farm in rural Sindh, with her parents, two sisters, and an older brother. Early in the film, her father encourages his daughters as well as his son to value the land and be prepared to defend it: ""No matter what happens, you need to protect this land. This isn't just land. This is your honour." [6] After Nazo's father and brother are arrested, a scheming uncle tries to lay claim to the family farm. Nazo, with her mother and sisters, defends their land, even when it is attacked by 200 mercenaries, hired by the uncle. [10]
After its debut showing at the 2017 Edinburgh International Film Festival, My Pure Land was selected as the British entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards, marking the first time the United Kingdom had submitted an Urdu language film. [5] Although it did not become one of the Academy's nominees, the "Oscar connection" helped to boost the film's profile. [11]
Reviewers generally praised the film's beauty, its emotional impact, and the acting of Pakistani dancer Suhaee Abro as the teenaged protagonist Nazo Dharejo. The extensive use of flashbacks was interesting to some and confusing to others. [11] The Guardian gave the film two stars out of five, calling it "a good idea gone slightly awry." [12] The Times , giving it four out of five stars, called the film "lyrical, heart-poundingly tense and strikingly feminist." [13]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 94% based on reviews from 17 critics. [14]
Garhi Yasin Sindh is a town and taluka of Shikarpur District, Sindh, Pakistan.
Sanjha is a Pakistani drama series began to telecast on Hum TV from 17 November 2011. It was written by Samira Fazal and directed Farooq Rind. Focuses on women trafficking, it has Suhaee Abro in the title role of Sanjha who comes to the Karachi city from the Thar Desert and is constrained to work in a brothel; the kotha.
Suhaee Abro is a Pakistani dancer and actress. She specialises in the field of dance and is a trained classical dancer. Suhaee works in television plays, theatre, documentaries and music videos. She won best New Television Sensation Award (Female) at 1st Hum Awards 2013. She is the daughter of Sindhi poet and activist Attiya Dawood.
Humaira Channa, also known as Humera Channa, is a 6 Nigar Award winning film playback singer from Pakistan. She has won 3rd most Nigar Awards in history, ranked only after Noor Jehan and Mehnaz.
Mah e Mir is a 2016 Pakistani biographical film directed by Anjum Shahzad, produced by Khurram Rana, Sahir Rasheed, Badar Ikram and written by Sarmad Sehbai. The film is based on the life of the famous poet Mir Taqi Mir, role played by Fahad Mustafa. Film also stars Iman Ali, Sanam Saeed, Alyy Khan and Manzar Sehbai in lead roles. It was the official submission by the Pakistani Academy Selection Committee as the country's entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 89th Academy Awards but it was not nominated.
Dukhtar is a 2014 Pakistani drama-thriller film directed by Afia Nathaniel. The film stars Samiya Mumtaz, Mohib Mirza, Saleha Aref, Asif Khan, Ajab Gul and Samina Ahmad. The film is Afia Nathaniel's feature directorial debut; she also wrote and produced the film. It is the story of a mother and her ten-year-old daughter, who leave their home to save the girl from an arranged marriage to a tribal leader.
Mor Mahal is a 2016 Pakistani historical fiction television fantasy series based on life of Nawab Asif Jehan of Hakim dynasty created and directed by Sarmad Khoosat, produced by Babar Javed and was originally conceptualized by Imran Aslam in 2002 and written by Sarmad Sehbai in 2004. Mor Mahal is known as one of the biggest television projects in Asia. The serial stars Umair Jaswal, Meesha Shafi Hina Khawaja Bayat, Sania Saeed and Fiza Ali in the lead roles. The cast also includes Shah Fahad, Jana Malik, Sonia Nazir, Kinza Hashmi and Ali Saleem. Umair Jaswal who played the role of a nawab alongside Meesha Shafi made his television debut.
My Life as a Courgette is a 2016 stop-motion animated comedy-drama film directed by Claude Barras. It was screened in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.
Sarmad Sehbai is a Pakistani poet, playwright, film and theatre director, worked in Urdu, Punjabi and English languages.
Motorcycle Girl is a 2018 Pakistani biographical adventure drama film based on the life of motorcyclist Zenith Irfan. Directed, written and co-produced by Adnan Sarwar, it is second installment in Sarwar's thematic Hero trilogy, following Shah (2015). The film stars Sohai Ali Abro as Zenith Irfan who travels to northern areas of Pakistan on a motorbike to fulfil her father's wish, facing many challenges along the way, with Samina Peerzada, Ali Kazimi, and Shamim Hilaly also playing supporting roles.
Naz Mukhtiar Dharejo, also known as Waderi Nazo Dharejo, is a Pakistani activist and politician. Her defense of her agricultural land against male relatives inspired her moniker "Pakistan's toughest woman" and also the 2017 film My Pure Land.
Sarmad Masud, also known as Sam Masud, is a British filmmaker whose 2017 movie My Pure Land was the first Urdu language film nominated by the UK for a Foreign Language Oscar award.
Flock Edit is a British independent out-of-house film editing company.
Popularly known as Sarmad Sindhi for his work on Sindhi Folk Music was a Sindhi folk singer, songwriter of Sindhi language. Considered one of the great singers of Golden era of Sindhi literature and Sindhi music
The U.K. has picked My Pure Land, an Urdu-language feature from first-time director Sarmad Masud, as its submission for consideration for the 2018 Oscars in the foreign-language film category. This marks the first time Britain has submitted an Urdu-language title to be its Oscar hopeful.
I came across an article in The Express Tribune - "Meet Nazo Dhajero: The toughest woman in Sindh" - and sent the journalists who wrote it an email. That's how I got to speak to Nazo.
xx
The film is based on the real story of Nazo Dharejo, who grew up in a rural pocket of Sindh with her two sisters and elder brother. Nazo's father, Khuda Buksh was a farmer and her mother Waderi Jamzadi had to raise her children.
It’s a modern-day feminist Western set in Pakistan, based on the extraordinary true story of one woman and her family who defended their home and land from 200 bandits. The film was self-funded via friends and family and our last investor was the great supporter of Pakistani cinema - Mr Bill Kenwright.
It’s a good idea (a female-centric Pakistani western, shot on location!) that doesn’t quite hang together, though there are things to appreciate, such as Haider Zafar’s cinematography, which captures the gorgeous, stoic Nazo in silhouette at sunset and lit by moonlight.