5 million of the total population of the country. Similarly, about 188.9 million cellular connections are active in Pakistan which is equal to 77.8 percent of 241 million population. Alike, the users of Facebook have jumped to record 44.50 million while 71.70 million population use YouTube, 17.30 million on Instagram, 54.38 million TikTok and 30.21 million snapchat, affecting films and tv dramas.
âWhen I was a student at University, I used to watch a quality movie at Firdus cinema every Sunday. Now I am extremely disappointed to see the demolished Firdus cinema where a trade Plaza was constructed, resulting in the deprivation of thousands of fans of entertainment,â said Nasir Khan, a film lover at Arshad Cinema and a resident of Mardan.
The closure of two cinemas including âTajâ cinema in Mardan have forced him to visit Peshawar to watch a Pashto film in a relaxed environment,â said Nasir.
âWhen I visited Peshawar for my favourite âTitanicâ English movie and Pashto film âOrbalâ in my student life at Capital Cinema on Arbab Road, it was jam-packed, leaving me with no chance but to purchase an advance ticket to watch my favourite movies. It was extremely heartening that todayâs oldest cinema of Peshawar is no more,â he said.
Nasir said that he along with friends was planning to move to Rawalpindi and Lahore to watch some new movies in a relatively better cinema environment there on upcoming weekend.
Besides Peshawar, four cinemas in Nowshera also became victims of commercialization and trade besides social media onslaught, he said.
Gohar Khan Yousafzai, manager Sabrina Cinema Peshawar told APP that he screened two shows daily of a Pashto movie by charging only Rs250 per ticket every day, adding there are hardly 50 people in the cinema hall these days which is highly discouraging and now most of films shows were shifted to the weekend to avert financial losses.
Renowned film artist Javed Babar who is also Pride of Performance said that the reasons for dying cinemas were its poor story content and outdated cinematography, wrong presentation of Pashto culture and vulgarity besides internet blitz.
âA quality film normally requires around Rs 10 million investment while most film producers are being asked for production of a Pashto movie at Rs three million cost which was insufficient to produce a quality Pashto movie,â he said.
He said Pashto films have high-profit potential due to vast viewership in Pakistan mostly in KP, Karachi and Afghanistan, recalling that when a Pashto film was finally released in the city in the past, thousands of film lovers with beat drums gathered outside the cinema houses and cheered in favour of their favourite hero that was now hardly seen today in Peshawar. âOur cultural values and minimal wages discourage new talent from joining the film industry courtesy to social media blitz.â
Despite incidents of terrorism, he said local film producers and cinema owners of KP had remained resilient and kept cinema houses functional even in the most difficult times and provided entertainment to people.
He urged the KP government to support those who believed in quality film work and provide financial incentives to revive the film industry in KP.
âWe urged the provincial government to exempt cinemas from excessive taxation and provide better wages to the artist community enabling them to produce quality films like Orbal, Khana Badosh, Alzam and Deedan imperative for a knowledge-based tolerant society,â he said.
APP/fam/1455
.