On March 5 in my home
city of Seattle, I had the pleasure of being part of the first North American
audience to view the fine debut feature by a talented and enterprising
Pakistani filmmaker, Iram Parveen Bilal. Josh (English title: Against the
Grain) is the story of Fatima, an elegant and well-bred elite Karachiite who
involves herself in village society and politics – thereby endangering herself
and others – when she insists on finding out why her beloved maid has gone
missing. It’s a cross-cultural story but emphatically a domestic Pakistani one,
with minimal reference to the world outside Pakistan. This is as it should be,
though it renders Josh, like other serious Pakistani films, less accessible to
Western viewers.
Americans are accustomed to seeing other countries,
especially Pakistan, as refractions of our own national worries and
self-regarding obsessions. That is our problem, not Pakistan’s, and Josh serves
us well by declining to pander or spoon-feed. It is a very good film, well
conceived and executed on a small budget, and the question in my mind as I left
the cinema was whether and how it might be possible to shoehorn such a serious
piece of Pakistani storytelling into the awareness of some measurable fraction
of the millions who know Pakistan only through TV news and Hollywood movies
such as Zero Dark Thirty. I was very nearly the only gora at the Seattle
screening.
Fatima is a tender-hearted and perhaps naïve member of
Karachi’s cosmopolitan elite. She wears sleeveless dresses; she socializes with
fashionable young friends in trendy restaurants; her feckless artist boyfriend
(not husband) wants to emigrate to America.
She could have left well enough
alone, but to do so would have been to abandon her servant to a cruel and
undeserved fate. By going to the village and raising awkward questions, she not
only leaves her own comfort zone but compels others to leave theirs as well.
It’s dangerous, even potentially explosive stuff, as all good art is. It holds
a mirror up to a flawed society and asks its own characters, and by extension
its viewers, to try to become better versions of themselves.
This applies, certainly, to the habitually timid villagers in
the film and their thuggish local landowner and his gundas. But by definition
the Pakistani-American audience members in Seattle and other cities are
counterparts of Fatima and her privileged urban friends, and the film addresses
them primarily. How can we, who enjoy affluence and freedom of action,
intervene in a rustic world of rough injustices that are usually inflicted
offscreen? Should we intervene? If we do, how can we avoid inadvertently doing
more harm than good? How might we be involved regardless, perhaps without
realizing it?
Because, make no mistake, we elite city dwellers are involved in
the lives and deaths of the poor and vulnerable, whether we like it or not. If
Fatima had chosen her own safety by averting her eyes, her involvement in her
maid’s terrible fate would have been no less. Thus the choice she does make, to
enlist her privilege and other resources in the service of justice, is the more
courageous and better one, whatever the outcome.
The things Iram Parveen Bilal said during a post-screening
discussion with the warmly appreciative Seattle audience suggest her awareness
of the importance, as well as the further potential, of what she has achieved
with Josh. Although she has an undergraduate degree in engineering, she said,
“I felt that there are a lot of doctors and engineers in Pakistan, and there
are not many storytellers. Everybody makes documentaries about Pakistan. I
wanted my first feature-length film to be from Pakistan.
We worked with a
completely Pakistani cast and crew.” She singled out for praise another young
Pakistani woman, Nausheen Dadabhoy, who did the film’s beautiful
cinematography: “She was pretty awesome.”
About Fatima, Iram said: “She is ignorant. Everybody’s
telling her, ‘Don’t go, don’t go.’ But in that ignorance is her strength. “No
matter how dangerous things are, people who want to do things do them. Most of
my positive role models have been very strong women; Pakistani women are very
strong. It’s about whether you have a conscience or not. Rich or poor. Do you
really care about what’s going on around you? I think Fatima is blessed to have
that.”
JOSH is on its North American distribution tour currently
prior to an announcement soon for its release in Pakistan. The film is set to
hit screens in NYC, DC, Boston, Philadelphia, New Jersey, Chicago, Calgary,
Houston, Dallas, Phoenix and Atlanta. For latest updates, please join
www.facebook.com/thefilmjosh.
ETHAN CASEY
(www.ethancasey.com) is the author of Alive and Well in Pakistan: A Human
Journey in a Dangerous Time (2004, to be reprinted next year in an updated
10th-anniversary edition).
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