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‘Pakistan has been misrepresented to the world as an unsafe place’ Liev Sch

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LAHORE:
Liev Schreiber is a straightforward actor — if he likes the script, he will do it but if the story doesn’t lure him in, he will not be a part of it.

He is currently in India promoting his project, The Reluctant Fundamentalist — a tale of a young Pakistani chasing corporate success on Wall Street — a film he describes as a thriller. It will tickle the viewers’ minds and give them something to think about, he says. The movie is slated for release in Pakistan, finally, on May 24.

“I don’t want to minimise the impact of 9/11; 99% of the reactions to the tragedy seemed reasonable, but there was a level of prejudice,” says Schreiber, giving some background to the issue the movie is based on. “Witnessing some of the decisions that were taken, I think if anything, this film will shed a different light [on this event] and encourage conversation.”

The actor feels Pakistan has been misrepresented to the world — it’s been shown as a dangerous place that shares a border with a terrorist hub like Afghanistan. “I would have liked to visit Lahore because it was the place we represented in the movie,” he says, adding that he is no expert on the country’s political situation and has never visited the land.

“I grew up in Canada, which has a huge Pakistani population and my hometown itself, was about 90% Pakistani,” he admits. “There are thousands of Pakistanis I knew growing up and with whom I went to school with.” He strongly believes that “people are people” and this is why he chose to do this film. “We have to take time out and understand each other; build better friendships and relationships,” he adds.

The film’s director Mira Nair has brought together actors from different ethnicities onto one screen and that is what makes the project special for Schreiber. “When we were shooting in Delhi, the idea that we as actors have an understanding even though we don’t speak the same language, was somehow reinforced in my mind,” he continues. “We do exactly the same things, as far as our work goes.”

“What I found unbelievably comforting is that for actors, there is a common thread regarding culture and about how we go about our work — it excludes political ideals,” adds the actor.

In his shoes
Schreiber doesn’t really need any introduction — he started off his career as an indie actor but went on to be a part of numerous acclaimed movies such as Hamlet, Twilight and the X-Men Origins: Wolverine, to name a few.

He feels that if you want to make a film that will spark a conversation amidst a group of people on that specific topic, then you need to be able to connect with those people on the same level. After that, “the internet can take care of it,” he laughs. “And if no one makes them [these kind of movies], then no one will see them.”

“The global nature and direction that this business is going in, the seamlessness in which films can be shown in the US, then in Pakistan and India at the same time, is fantastic,” he says. “For us, it’s an unbelievably exciting journey. Growing up, I remember we would always hear about the amount of films that were coming out of Pakistan and India and that the industry had doubled the output North America was producing.” He admits it seemed “exotic and wondered what they might be doing different.”
Published in The Express Tribune, May 5th, 2013.
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No I disagree , WE HAVE A PROBLEM A CANCER.

A problem cannot be fixed unless its accepted , and that problem is weak police and intelligence force and lack of police helicopters
to fight crime and terrorist on motor cycles

We need to fix these issues
 
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It isn't a horror like it's often portrayed in the media, but it's not all that great as some Pakistanis would like to believe either.
 
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I want a Pakistan, whose glimpses I have seen where Teens could go on a bike at 10 in night around their neighborhood go grab a seikh kabab or pepsi or where you can take a pickup go with your whole family to restaurant sit outside in open ... and talk and eat and drive home ...

No Bhatta khor , No police chor , No fear


No bomb fear
No Theft fear
No Fear

Too much to ask ? No Imran Khan will bring things back to how it was

* Better Education
* Better police
* Better security

Enough of COMPROMISE on basic rights ... you fix it or you get kicked in buttocks
 
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i think mr. Schreiber has just put his views on the table and that is nothing wrong.
people are just people n they just go on with their lives, no matter the place.
off course u guys have problems, but who doesnt.
 
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For the common man, most of Pakistan is pretty safe. For those in politics, no. The FATA and KP regions are dangerous. I was in Pk in late 2012 and Punjab is as safe as its always been.
 
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hold on. he is shooting in india, and has never gone to pakistan, and yet he makes this comment?

For local consumption only! The movie is about a Pakistani so he would have to say something like this. I hope people are not foolish enough to travel to Pakistan, its very dangerous.
 
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For local consumption only! The movie is about a Pakistani so he would have to say something like this. I hope people are not foolish enough to travel to Pakistan, its very dangerous.
its dangerous for white folks ... not for others...
 
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Well , there should be not even a theft or small homocide , that is the Pakistan we want

Not accepted .. to turn away at bombings in city that is not normal
 
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His comments are very similar to comment on PDF....say whatever you like..without knowing the matter....

If he thinks that way then first he should go to Pakistan and then say this.......
 
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He just wants to sound politically correct. He has never been to Pakistan, how does he know what the country is like ?

Anyway, I hope he is having a good time in India.
 
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