
Saleem Mairaj
1975 (51 год)ریاست میں ریاست
Asad Malik
Munawar Saeed, Saleem Mairaj
Munawar Saeed (Abba) is the Godfather to four young men. The five men are living in a low income apartment, sharing comical jokes in the middle of the night. Their intellect is shown through their dialogue but they seem as though they are typical proletarians in their physical appearance. In the midst of the story, violence has erupted in the city and heavy firing has started right outside on their street.
Riyasat Mein Riyasat
Lucknow Wale Lateefullah
Mohammad Iftikhar Iffi
Hassan Ahmed, Sonya Hussain
Lateefullah lives in Lucknow, India with her family but has paternal relatives in Pakistan, he comes to Pakistan to get married. The girl Maira whom he is about to married expects him to look like a Bollywood hero. Lateef on the other hand turns out totally different. Lateef also expects her to be typical traditional and conservative girl. However both finds out them to be completely different from each other's expectations.
Lucknow Wale Lateefullah
ساون
Farhan Alam
Saleem Mairaj, Tipu Sharif
A handicapped 9-year old boy who lives in a valley in the mountains of Balochistan is rejected by his father, intimidated by society, harassed by friends and left alone due to his disability. Strengthened by memories and dreams of the love of his mother, he begins a perilous journey back to his family in the main city.
Saawan
جوش: متحدہ آزادی
Iram Parveen Bilal
Aamina Sheikh, Khalid Malik
Fatima, a teacher living her elite life in Karachi, shattered, when her nanny Nusrat, inexplicably disappears. Fatima travels to investigate her disappearance and finds a dangerous truth about Nusrat and her village.
Josh: Independence Through Unity
Zibahkhana
Omar Ali Khan
Kunwar Ali Roshan, Rooshanie Ejaz
In the spirit of the EC horror comics of old, the film tells the story of five teens who get lost on their way to a rock concert, are menaced by flesh eating mutations and then fall into the clutches of a family of backwoods killers. The film includes copious amounts of gore alongside a splattering of social commentary and several slices of dark humour. It’s best seen as a tribute to the cinema of Lucio Fulci and George Romero, but viewed from a distinctly Pakistani perspective.
Hell's Ground