Hammad Khan, director of Slackistan – the coming-of-age film about a bunch of bored, rich young Pakistanis cruising around Islamabad with nothing to do – could have probably seen it coming.
Why? Because Slackistan contains the words "Taliban" and "lesbian", swear words in English and Urdu, scenes showing characters drinking (filmed with fake alcohol, incidentally) and a joke about beards (as in "my beard is longer than your beard") made between characters talking hypothetically about a fancy dress party. These are not the CBFC's only objections, but the main ones it highlighted.
The decision has left Slackistan fans on Facebook – many of whom haven't actually seen the film because they live in Pakistan – hugely disappointed. They're calling it "unbelievable hypocrisy", "narrow-minded rubbish" and the decision of an "insecure nation".

"Maybe the establisment's view is that young Pakistanis saying words like 'Taliban' and 'lesbian' represent a more potent threat than the bullets and bombs that are finding increasing legitimacy in the country," says Khan. "Slackistan might be seen as an unusual film and a bit closer to home than Hollywood. But it's easier to get away with violence and murder in Pakistan than it is to legitimately release a film."
Slackistan isn't very politically charged. Khan insists it's not a "statement" film but a fiction about growing up. Essentially, not a lot happens; there's a lot of procrastination and navel-gazing, which shows just how aimless its characters are meant to be.

Slackistan, of course, isn't the first movie that's been censored by the CBFC, which says its job is to "eliminate public exhibition of a film or any part thereof which is likely to impair accepted moral standards ... hurt national sentiments ... undermine Islam or ridicule any religious sect, caste [or] creed". Last year, it banned spoof Osama movie Tere Bin Laden, and it will probably ban more.
Meanwhile, Slackistan has drawn in crowds at film festivals in New York, London, Goa, San Francisco and Abu Dhabi. Last week, screenings of the film held at London's Institute of Contemporary Arts sold out.
At another showing, held four days ago in aid of charity, Khan took part in a director's Q&A session with me. The audience – largely although not exclusively made up of young British and American Pakistanis – loved the film.
The youngest in the audience, not yet in his teens, made an interesting observation: "Aren't the characters all slackers because they don't have any role models? Surely that's the point? That they need role models?"
He's right – it is the point. Pakistan needs people like Khan and all those involved in the making of his film to uphold its creative scene at a time when the rest of the country is falling apart. Censoring them won't achieve anything – as Khan plans to prove. His fans are urging him to release the movie online or organise small private screenings in Pakistan (which technically wouldn't be the same as showing it in public in the cinema).

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