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Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera
Lifestyle
Abid Hussain

Pakistan bans its official Oscar entry Joyland

The film, which portrays a love affair between a man and a transgender woman, has won global accolades on film festival circuits, including at Cannes earlier this year [File: Stephane Mahe/Reuters]

Islamabad, Pakistan – The Pakistani government has banned the film Joyland, which was the South Asian nation’s official entry for the Oscars, for containing “highly objectionable material”, with the controversy triggering social media debate on the issue of censorship.

The film, which portrays a love affair between a man and a transgender woman, has won global accolades on film festival circuits, including at Cannes earlier this year. It was slated to be released in Pakistan on November 18.

The film was cleared by the country’s provincial as well as central censor boards in August. Films have to be passed by federal as well as provincial censor boards before they are allowed to be screened in theatres.

But a complaint by a religious party leader forced the federal censor board to reverse its earlier decision, and to declare the movie ineligible for the “whole of Pakistan”.

“Written complaints were received that the film contains highly objectionable material which does not conform with the social values and moral standards of our society,” the notification issued on Friday stated.

Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party Senator Mushtaq Ahmad Khan praised the ban in a tweet, saying that as an Islamic republic, Pakistan must adhere to Islamic values and norms.

From left to right, Saim Sadiq, Rasti Farooq, Alina Khan, Ali Junejo, Sohail Sameer and Sania Saeed at the premiere of Joyland at the Toronto International Film Festival in Canada on September 12, 2022 [Carlos Osorio/Reuters]

Social media hashtags

The controversy around the film has spilled over into social media, with #ReleaseJoyland and #BanJoyland trending both in favour and against the critically-acclaimed film.

An outpouring of support has flooded social media from people, including artists, for the film.

Author Fatima Bhutto tweeted praise for the movie in a thread and said Joyland is a “beautiful, honest and intelligent film and it should embarrass the state that people all over the world can watch it except people at home.”

“The censorship of Joyland is senseless. Pakistan is teeming with artists, filmmakers, [and] writers and has a cultural richness and more importantly bravery that the world admires. A smart state would celebrate & promote this not silence and threaten it.”

Under pressure, the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday constituted an eight-member committee to “deliberate on complaints” against the movie. The committee has been asked to submit its report by Tuesday.

Director of the film Saim Sadiq told Al Jazeera that he was dismayed at the government’s decision.

“This is a very confusing situation. Earlier the board granted a certificate and suddenly [it] has been taken back,” he told Al Jazeera.

“We are taking every democratic and diplomatic and legal means available to our end to try and sort this out and we hope that better sense will prevail.”

Global accolades

Joyland is set in Lahore city in Pakistan’s eastern province of Punjab and depicts the story of a young man who falls in love with a transgender woman. It debuted at the Cannes festival earlier this year, where it received accolades, including the Jury Prize as well as the Queer Palm award.

It has since won global praise at various film festivals and on Friday, the day it was banned in Pakistan, Sadiq received the Young Cinema Award at the Asia Pacific Screen Awards in Australia.

The movie was chosen as Pakistan’s official entry for the Academy Awards (Oscars) in September, and the youngest Nobel Prize winner, Malala Yousafzai, has joined the Joyland team as an executive producer to promote it for the upcoming awards season.

Sadiq says no film can please everyone and those who do not like can choose not to watch it.

“If you have a problem with a film, you can just choose not to watch it. No film will please all the people, and that’s why we don’t need to take permission from 220 million people to release a film,” he said, referring to the population of the South Asian nation.

Meanwhile, JI party Senator Khan admitted to Al Jazeera that he has not watched the film but he has been told by “authentic sources” about the content of the film.

“I was given information by authentic sources in media that it [the film] has received awards in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) category in Cannes,” the Senator told Al Jazeera.

“This means, the movie is dealing with a topic which has no place in an Islamic republic like Pakistan.”

He also took objection to the protagonist’s Muslim name ‘Haidar’ due to its religious reverence in the country. This film glamourises a “male love affair”, he said.

“This is part of a trend of cultural terrorism in Pakistan, which questions our institution of marriage and our cultural norms. This movie is an act of war against them,” he said.

Pakistan has a history of banning movies on various subjects, often citing religious and nationalistic reasons for its decisions.

Director of the film Saim Sadiq told Al Jazeera that he was dismayed at the government’s decision [File: Carlos Osorio/Reuters]
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