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Pakistani Plays Starfleet Captain Star Trek Movie

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I assume many readers have already seen the new Star Trek movie and seen Faran Tahir, an actor of Pakistani origin, who sets up the story in its first 15 minutes as a Starfleet Captain Robau, fearless leader of Starship Kelvin.


Too bad that the storyline requires for him to die early on, but it is a pivotal role and Trekie blogs are writing about how his portrayal as a courageous and heroic captain is important to Star Trek history. Have you seen the movie? What do you think about his performance?

Some may not know that both of Faran’s parents are veteran PTV artistes and played pivotal roles in some of the early PTV dramas. His father, Naeem Tahir, was later the Director General to the Pakistan National Council of the Arts and also acted in Khuda Key Liye (as the father of the two brothers around whom the story revolved). 46 year olf Faran was born in Los Angeles, where his parents were then studying, grew up in Lahore and studied at University of California at Berkeley. He has a long list of Hollywood roles to his name, but mostly small roles and often playing the villian. The most famous of these roles is clearly Captain Robau in Star Trek and the villainous Raza in Iron Man. Many Pakistanis woud also remember him for Charlie Wilson’s War where he plays a Pakistani Army officer.

I had a chance to briefly meet Faran last year when he spoke at a conference on Pakistan and Pakistanis organized by the Organization of Pakistani Entrepreneurs of North America (OPEN) that I had a small role in organizing here at my University. He had spoken at a panel on Pakistanis who had taken on careers off the beaten path. He impressed many, including myself, with his good humor and practical remarks. You can see the same good humor and spark in this interview about his Star Trek role (also includes clips of him in the film).


The role of Captain Robau is making waves in Trekie circles because of the nature of the character portrayed by Faran. As one blogger notes:

One thing is clear, the captain played by Tahir will not be another in the long line of weak captains seen in so many Star Trek films. Captains like Terrell (Wrath of Khan), Harriman (Generations), Styles and Esteban (Search for Spock) have ranged from timid bureaucrats to downright buffoonish. It appears that past Trek film makers felt the need to have other captains be foils or patsies to make Kirk and Picard seem that much better. It has been reported that in his role as consultant for the post TMP films, Gene Roddenberry himself had expressed concerns over how other captains were being portrayed. This issue isn’t lost on Trek’s new set of film makers either…

The fact that Tahir is Pakistani also cannot be ignored. One only needs to look at much of his recent work (on 24, Sleeper Cell, Iron Man, etc) to see that Tahir gets a lot of work playing villains. Like the Germans and Russians of past generations, many of today’s popular culture villains are played by those of Middle-Eastern or South-west Asian descent. But just like Gene Roddenberry put a Russian onto the bridge of the Enterprise in the height of the cold-war, JJ Abrams has put a Pakistani into the captain’s chair in the post-9/11 world.

The Sci-Fi Wire also has an interesting interview with him, from which some excerpts are noteworthy:

“[It's] a great thing,” Tahir said in an exclusive interview. “I have had conversations with J.J. about this, … because I knew the other people who were being considered for this role, and they were not [cast]. So one day over dinner I was, ‘So what was it, why?’ You know, just to get a window into it. And I think he—and I have to commend him on this—what he was trying to do was find a certain quality in the actor and just to set up the story, you know? And to me, that is refreshing, and it’s great to hear. … The biggest compliment is that he was looking for a certain quality. He could have found that in me, he could have found that in [anyone else]. And it just happened to be me, and … the added … layer to that is that, yeah, I happen to be of a certain descent, and … the casting was [in] the spirit of what Star Trek is about.”

Robau is the captain of the Kelvin, the starship on which James T. Kirk’s father, George Kirk (Chris Hemsworth), is first officer and is serving with his wife, Winona Kirk (Jennifer Morrison), who is pregnant with James, as the ship comes under attack by the villainous Romulan Nero (Eric Bana).

“I am on the ship,” Tahir said. “That’s how the story goes. And then, of course I have to go deal with Nero. So that’s the premise of it. … It sets up this entire saga of [Star Trek]. People who understand Star Trek, it kind of takes us back to a time when … the story began.”

Also see ATP on: Ramchand Pakistani, Son of a Lion, Bhowani Junction, Charlie Wilson’s War, Aliens in America, Khuda ke Liye, Little Mosque on the Prairie, Man Push Cart.
 
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I think his performance was simply brilliant. Who would have imagined to see a Pakistani as a Starfleet Captain. :smokin:
 
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In February TrekMovie.com first revealed that the unknown ‘Federation Captain’ (now known to be named Capt. Robau) was to be played by Faran Tahir. In a new interview with Deadbolt, the actor described his Star Trek captain “a good guy” and said his ship has “muscle.” Tahir also talked at length about the significance of his casting and how faithful the film is.

ac42af33a26402243c7a7ba0ee247bbb.jpg

In the TrekMovie.com report, it was noted that the casting of a Pakistani actor as the role of a ‘heroic Captain’ in 2008 was in the same tradition as Gene Roddenberry’s inclusion of a Russian on the bridge in the cold war. Tahir was asked about that:

…just a couple of days ago a friend of mine - I’m kind of a Trekkie, but some of my friends are like real Trekkies so of course they go to all of these blogs - sent me this link to a blog that has like 500 blogs on it just on that fact. It’s an actor of Middle Eastern decent playing a captain, which hasn’t happened before. There have been other characters of Middle Eastern decent, but there has never been a captain. And a lot of the discussion on the blogs was about the fact. At least for me, personally, it’s great because it is a context in which my ethnicity is not being discussed as an issue. To me, that’s great - about a character in a story who’s trying to get Task A, Task B, Task C done. And you’re not dealing with the color of his skin or whatever, we’re not dealing with all of that. We’re working on a very even playing field and the blogs were also about that. It gives us hope, in a way, if you look at it as the realities of today hopefully will not be the realities of tomorrow.

Tahir also talked about the faithfulness of the movie and a bit out his ship:

It’s very faithful, all of the characters are there. You do get new insights into them and you get things that so far people have probably pulled together from their own research. Some of those questions might be answered and some of them might be challenged, where people thought up certain histories they created. Some of those might be challenged; some might be corroborated. It’s a nice mix. The feel of the movie is great, at least the part that I had. It has a very robust feel to it. It’s very tangible. The ship that I command has a lot of muscle to it. It looks like a capable thing, you know. So yeah, I think J.J. knows what he’s doing. He has a really great vision and a really great way of executing his vision. I think a lot of people will be very pleasantly surprised.

For much more on Tahir’s role in Iron Man (and more on Trek), check out the interview at Deadbolt

NOTE: Deadbolt name his character as ‘Rabu’, but TrekMovie.com has confirmed it is ‘Robau’. Soon TrekMovie.com will put up a video interview with writer Roberto Orci, and one question discusses Tahir and his casting.
 
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THANx new i didnt no he is a pakistani Big fan of star trek here.

Live Long and prosper.:smitten:
 
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haha yeah i seen this guy in some big movies he's badass nice to see a pakistani actor finally getting noticed but why do they say middle eastern ?
 
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Neo, that picture is from Iron man, in which also he had a role.

A bigger,longer, more substantial one than in Star trek. In star trek, his ship gets attacked, he hands over command of ship and dies - all in the first few minutes. In Iron man, he gets to kidnap the hero, fires a bunch of guns, belts out heavy dialogues in 2-3 languages and lasts until second half of the movie before being killed.

Best of luck to him!
 
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