At New York University, mid-2017, with the retrieved cans: (Left to right) the writer, archivists Marie Lascu, Bonnie Sauer, Ben Moskowitz - Photos courtesy the writer
About 42 years ago, in 1976, a film made by this writer screened in the country and at overseas film festivals. The English version of the film was named Beyond the Last Mountain (BTLM). An Urdu version was called Musafir. The film, which had shunned offers of financing from the state-owned National Film Development Corporation (Nafdec, then led by an exceptionally cultured managing director, Khawaja Shahid Hussain) in order to avoid any possible official control of content, and from commercial financiers only interested in profits, managed to complete a combined 25-week Silver Jubilee run in cinemas.
Majeed Ahmed, now deceased, my immensely gifted partner-art director in our advertising firm, MNJ Communications, had sportingly agreed to co-invest in the film with me. Our goal in making the film, was to score several “firsts.” BTLM was the first Pakistani film in which talented women from diverse disciplines, who had never previously acted in a film, essayed the lead roles. The mode was low-key and realistic instead of the melodramatic, high-pitched norm. Spectacular action in some scenes, requiring complex logistics in production, was also effectively achieved.
Distinctive background music included the first-ever use in a Pakistani film of a harpsichord specially imported for the film from London. Of three musical sequences, Urdu lyrics were lip-synched on screen in only one to celebrate a pre-wedding mehndi. Filmed entirely on location, BTLM was able to reflect the look and feel of Pakistan in the mid-1970s with the introduction of a new cast of gifted actors and dozens of lay citizens rather than professional extras in group scenes. Other firsts included a young new crew behind the camera, some innovative features in filming techniques and promotion, portraying some social, cultural practices no longer publicly seen in the country.
However, over the past four decades, almost all of the celluloid prints of the film have either been lost or damaged. This was primarily due to my own indefensible negligence, and some other reasons better left unnamed. Only about 75 percent of the film was transferred on to video tape for preservation.
A small number of American volunteers are striving to preserve, restore and digitize the only complete print of the English version of Beyond The Last Mountain
But in 2018, a small number of American citizens, who have no prior association with Pakistan or this filmmaker, are voluntarily striving to preserve, restore and digitize what is possibly the only complete print of the English version, which has survived intact. They personify some of the finest virtues of the vast majority of the American people — warm, friendly, helpful.
How this has come about is a story in itself.
Found in the vaults
In January 2017, shortly after being appointed to her present position, Bonnie Marie Sauer, Director, Archives and Records Management of the Lincoln Centre for the Performing Arts (LCPA), New York asked intern Becca Bender, an NYU film graduate, to examine all the stored material.
The diligent intern spotted cans labeled with the English title of the film from Pakistan along with the producer-director’s name, company name, and a now-invalid Karachi address. Bonnie Sauer consulted Marie Lascu, archival consultant of LCPA, presently audio-visual archivist at Crowing Rooster Arts. They ascertained that the film had been received for possible screening at the Film Society or at the 1976 New York Film Festival. Back in Karachi, the absent-minded filmmaker had become so pre-occupied with travel and successful festival screenings in Tehran, Bombay, London and Mannheim (Germany) that he had completely forgot this one print, exiled and carelessly abandoned.
In New York, the film cans gradually descended into virtually invisible archival depths. Until their rediscovery in 2017. Rufus de Rehm, Programme Operations Manager at the LCPA Film Society, accidentally found the website of The Citizens’ Archive (TCA), the innovative initiative founded by filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, and passed on the contact details to Ms Lascu. In Karachi, TCA’s Aaliya Tayyabali responded promptly to the query from Marie Lascu and facilitated contact with this writer. Of course I was delighted to learn about the print’s survival — and the thoughtful efforts by complete strangers far away.
Reexamined by an expert