Islamabad : The Divvy Film Festival, a venture of the Foundation Art Divvy in collaboration with the Pakistan National Council of the Arts, has entered third week winning accolades from the audience of twin cities.
The six weeks long event is a celebration of depth and breadth of powerful independent Pakistani cinema.
More than 20 films, documentaries, feature films, short films, fiction and animations are part of this festival, few of which have already been screened.
On Friday, two films, ‘Some lover to some beloved’ by Umar Riaz and ‘Indus blues’ by Jawad Sharif were scheduled.
An outstanding documentary chronicling the life of veteran actor Zia Mohyeddin. Titled after Faiz’s poem, the film give whole account of Riaz’s life beginning from his child hood.
The core of his work seems to be an interpreter, which he immensely enjoys.
The film shows the footage of one evening in Lahore where Zia pays tribute to Faiz Ahmed Faiz, by only reciting his poetry.
The third documentary was ‘Indus Blues’ directed by Jawad Sharif shows the struggle of Pakistani folk artists to keep a fading art alive.
It also took the audience on a mystical journey from coastline to Karakoram mountains in the north.
Film traverses 1500KM along the Indus River, chronicling the music that emerges on its way and lives spent shaping these traditions.
A representational image of an immigrant holding a Canadian flag. — X/@CitImmCanada/FileIslamabad: A delegation of...
A photograph of students appearing for an exam. — AFP/FileRawalpindi:The first annual intermediate examination for...
This image shows the logo of the Ministry of Human Rights. — APP/FileIslamabad: Ministry of Human Right’s Helpline...
Deputy Commissioner Islamabad, Irfan Memon can be seen in this image. — Facebook/Office of the Deputy Commissioner,...
This representational image shows a little plant. — Unsplash/FileRawalpindi: Director General , Parks and...
Students in a school in Islamabad can be seen attending a class on October 12, 2023. — Facebook/Federal Directorate...