Monday, 29 December 2014

Boxer Amir Khan visits Army Public School, says ‘terrorism must stop’

Amir Khan Boxer Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Gen Raheel Sharif

PESHAWAR: Amir Khan, a British boxing champion of Pakistani origin, paid a visit to terror-hit Army Public School in Peshawar on Monday and said that his heart went out to the families and parents whose children had died in a brutal Taliban attack on Dec 16.

 

“The main reason I came to Pakistan was to visit Peshawar and see the parents of the victims,” Khan said.

 "Children must be scared to go back to school and the onus is on us to instil confidence in them, and also help to improve the country's security situation,” the star boxer said.

Khan expressed hope that the joint efforts of the armed forces and the citizens of Pakistan would help in ending terrorism.

“[For now], all we can do is [to] pray [for the victims' families] and hope [terrorist attacks] do not occur again,” he said.

Before visiting the Army Public School, Khan also met with Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Gen Raheel Sharif at the General Headquarters in Rawalpindi. During the meeting, Gen Raheel praised Khan's services for the people of Pakistan.

According to a tweet by Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) spokesman Maj Asim Bajwa, Khan also expressed solidarity with the families of the Peshawar school attack victims as well as the country's armed forces.

Woman of the year: The Pakistani mother


No assessment of women can be complete without saluting the courage of the Peshawar attack victims.—Reuters/file.

It is an unenviable exercise, to write about one tragedy in the midst of another. As Pakistanis pick up the pieces from Peshawar, collect the condolences, assess the helplessness and avert their eyes from what is at best a feeble future, there is the task of assessing the year gone by. And within this yearly exercise is the job of taking measure of the year for the country’s women.


Was it a good year for them? Were they defined by the Pakistani girl that won the Nobel Peace Prize or by the Pakistani woman who was stoned on the steps of a courthouse? Was it a year of successes or losses, more joy or more tears, more hopefulness or more regret?
To begin the task of weights and measures; there are numbers. More men than women are born in Pakistan – 105.7 boys born for every 100 girls. Of the girls that manage to survive, roughly 40 per cent will not be literate, and will never learn to write their name or read a book or sign a document. It may be an unlettered life, but it is likely to be a longer one – life expectancy for the Pakistani female has risen from around 53 years in 1970 to about 66.4 years.

Woman of the Year: The Pakistani mother


Nearly 150 of them buried their children in this the last month of the year, and no assessment of women can be complete without saluting the courage of these mothers. If war has defined Pakistan’s politics in 2014, the resilience of the Pakistani mother has been its least saluted constituency.

With the funerals of children tearing the hearts and minds of the country, it befits that the last moments of 2014 be devoted to remembering just that.
More than 75 per cent of Pakistan’s female population will be mothers during their lifetimes; they will bring children into the riven reality of a country that can provide few guarantees for them. If any words can define the condition of the country’s women, they would be the words of headmistress Tahira Qazi, who told the Taliban gunmen who entered the school: “Talk to me, I am their mother”.

She is gone now, but in her bravery, the women of Pakistan, mothers of now or later, have a summation of the challenge before them, which will not cede with the passing of the year.

The youngest mothers and those who tend to them

Many Pakistani women who become mothers are children themselves. A recent study disclosed that over half of married Pakistani women between the ages of 20 and 24 were married before they turned 18. Even this is some progress, however, the average age of marriage has gone up from 13.3 years in the 1950s to about 23 years currently.

Unsurprisingly, the youngest mothers are the poorest and least literate, living in the country’s rural areas where they have little or no access to healthcare. Only 20 per cent of the poorest Pakistani mothers had any medical care when they gave birth, compared to over 77 per cent of the country’s wealthiest.

Like everything else, the landscape of motherhood in Pakistan is defined by class, by the luck of those who have much; against the fortunes of those who have almost nothing at all. The Pakistani mother will bear 3.8 children during her lifetime, one of the highest rates in the world. In maternal health, Pakistan ranks above only above Afghanistan in the entire world. Only a quarter of Pakistani mothers have access to any kind of contraception.

Those that tend to the mothers were also targets this year. Members of Pakistan’s Lady Health Workers became targets, many were mothers themselves and others tended to women who were mothers; often providing the only healthcare that rural Pakistani women are able to receive.
Four more were killed in the last days of November, just as the numbers of the babies afflicted by the polio virus rose to 260, the highest anywhere in the world.

Being targeted by terrorists was not the only hurdle these mothers faced. Amid reports of widespread harassment by male superiors, one from Mansehra involved the case of Fauzia Bibi who was slapped on the face and abused. When confronted by the case, Dr Jamshed reported that the female health worker had “attacked” him. Despite all of these formidable obstacles, Pakistan’s Lady Health Workers continued to carry on.

The Plight of “Other” Mothers


There are mothers who mourn, and mothers who must be mourned. The year 2014 was barely half done when on the morning of May 27, Farzana Parveen, pregnant, was stoned to death outside Lahore High Court months before she could give birth.

In the initial reports of the incident, Parveen was said to have been stoned to death by her family for having married a man of her own choice. Those first reports said her father had admitted to the killing. Later, reports revealed complications in the story, with Muhammad Iqbal, Parveen's husband, now implicated in the murder of his first wife.

When the case finally came to court this November, Farzana Parveen’s father, brother, cousin and another man were found guilty of her death. She had been killed by her own. In meeting such an end, she joined the nearly 1000 women who are killed for honour every year in this country. In 2014, hers was the most gruesome and most public case.

This bygone year was also one in which a mother was sentenced to death. Asia Bibi, a mother of five, lost her appeal before the Lahore High Court on October 17 2014 and her death sentence for blasphemy was upheld. On December 2, 2014, her lawyer filed a final appeal before the Pakistan Supreme Court. If her case is not heard, she will await the execution of her death sentence.

The Pakistani woman stands very much in the midst of seas which were as turbulent in 2014 as they're likely to be in 2015. There have been flashes of brilliance, of sheer mettle and spirit; awards and achievements.
But any promise or glint of hope is drowned out by the wailing of those close to 200 mothers, who either buried their children in Peshawar near the turn of the year, or are awaiting the miracle of health and happiness for their battered, injured children languishing in hospital wards.

2014: When Lollywood met Bollywood

Clockwise from top: Fawad Khan, Ali Zafar, Humaima Malick and Imran Abbas



Indian cinema is one of the most flourishing industries found today and this year, many Pakistani actors also tried their luck in one of the world's most prolific film industries.

2014 had its standout moments for our beloved celebrities working in Bollywood and here's what they have to say about it.

Ali Zafar:

Ali Zafar in a scene from 'Kill Dil'. – Publicity photo

Ali Zafar leads the pack by being one of the first Pakistani actors to have accomplished relative success in a cutthroat Bollywood.
 
Ali ventured from working as a sketch artist in the Pearl Continental hotel, Karachi, to becoming a rock star and has now comfortably transitioned into a versatile actor having done a wide array of roles such as his debut in the satirical Tere Bin Laden to more romantic and comedic roles such as in Mere Brother Ki Dulhan and Total Siyappa.

However, in 2014, the heartthrob set out to redefine himself with Shaad Ali's Kill Dil in which he starred alongside big banner names like Ranveer Singh, Parineeti Chopra and Govinda.

Playing the role of a gangster, Ali has consciously tried to deviate from his rom-com image. The film led to mixed reviews, but Ali achieved what he had set out to do.

Speaking to Dawn, Ali tells us about his time on the Indian soil:
Was working in India a goal you had in mind from the beginning of your career or did it just happen when the opportunity presented itself?

Ali Zafar (AZ): Yes, it was a goal from the beginning.
If you go back in time (1999), when I was in college, I did have aspirations to become an internationally renowned singer, but back then, there was no such concept of somebody crossing over like that.
However, for some reason, I always had faith in the idea that an artist should strive to go global.
Once I started to talk to people about this idea, I realised that at the time there were very few people in Pakistan who dreamt big or thought outside the box. Primarily, the goal was to do well locally, basing their success on the amount of shows they've done in the country.

For me, the goal was to break barriers and I had to learn the dynamics of the business so it took time.
In the last 60 years, we had people trying to make it big there [in India], but were not successful.
So to be the first successful actor in India was a conscious struggle and effort. I wanted to break that barrier for others to also enjoy its fruit. And I'm happy and content that it has happened.

How is audience reception different in Pakistan and India?

AZ: Although I'm an optimist, at the same time I am also a realist and we must be honest with ourselves: all the most popular artists in Pakistan got to that level once they ventured into the Indian market.
Yes, they were well-known and admired in Pakistan, but they became stars when they tapped into the Indian market.
The reason behind this is that in Pakistan, the entertainment industry has neither developed as an industry nor has the perception of an artist. It'll take time for society to evolve and learn to appreciate art and artists.
Bollywood gives its stars value and appreciation. I'm not saying we don't get admiration and importance at home; it was Pakistan and Pakistanis alone who gave a lot of such stars their initial recognition, such as Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, Fawad Khan or Atif Aslam. However, to get to the next level, they had to make that leap and cross over to India.
There's no harm in accepting that our industry will take time to develop and it is working towards it. It's a process, a journey and it will eventually happen.


Share your favourite moment/memorable story from working in India.
AZ: I've always felt that when the masses are recognising you and appreciating you, such as the rickshaw or truck drivers, that's when you've become a celebrity and I love each and every one of my fans.
So when I was being driven through a small, not very posh, community in Mumbai, I got noticed and the entire community gathered around the car and started screaming my name and praising me and that was truly a touching moment for me.
The fact that they came out of their houses to just tell me they enjoy my work was a big moment for me.

Do you truly feel 100 per cent accepted across the border?
AZ: There's no black and white with this. There will always be people everywhere in the world who would accept certain ideas and some who would not.
I would say that a large percentage of people in India are accepting me, have [accepted me] right from the first film.
When Tere Bin Laden came out, people didn't go like, 'Where did this Pakistani come from?', they actually went out to watch the movie and I got a tremendous response from critics and audiences for my work .

Who is that one person from Pakistan, and that one person from India who should work across the border, but hasn’t so far and why?
AZ: Mahira Khan is one individual who I feel is very talented and should work in India. She carries herself well. As far as someone from India working in Pakistan, I think Deepika Padukone should be involved in a project.

Humaima Malick:

Humaima Malik. 

Humaima made her Bollywood debut earlier this year opposite Emraan Hashmi in 'Raja Natwarlal'.

The actor, who rose to fame after her performance in Shoaib Mansoor's Bol, gave a bold performance which met equal parts criticism and praise.
After Raja Natwarlal, Humaima has signed up for three films in Bollywood and already calls India her "second home".
The performer, who has also been making rounds on social media because of her on point fashion choices, speaks about working across the border:

Was working in India a goal you had in mind from the beginning of your career or did it just happen when the opportunity presented itself?
Humaima Malick (HM): I've never made goals in my life regarding my career because I feel like whatever you plan, sometimes it doesn't happen and sometimes, God has bigger plans for you.
When Bol released internationally, including in India, opportunities started coming in but at that time, I didn't really take them seriously nor did I have any plans to venture out into Bollywood.
When I got the script for Raja Natwarlal, I liked it. I thought it was different and not a typical Emraan Hashmi film. I liked the director as well as the production house and I figured I'd have good fun working with this team so I just went ahead with it.

How is audience reception different in Pakistan and India?
HM: India is a nation obsessed with cinema. They love their artists, they respect them so much.
Their celebrities are more famous than their politicians. If you go to Bombay, you'll see so many people waiting outside Mannat (Shahrukh Khan's house) or Jalsa (Amitabh Bachchan's house) just to catch a glimpse of them.
This is what we call stardom. People there respect and acknowledge art a lot.
Unfortunately, our nation has more pressing concerns such as immense poverty and security issues due to which entertainment takes a backseat.

Share your favourite moment/memorable story from working in India.
HM: This entire past year; the release of Raja Natwarlal; the shooting process throughout with my amazing team; all of it was very memorable and has brought me immense happiness.

Do you truly feel 100 per cent accepted across the border?
HM: I don't want to be accepted anywhere [laughs].
I'm an artist. I work to be appreciated, I work for the people who love me.
I'm a peace ambassador, I always say that actors are peace ambassadors so there are no boundaries and no country limits for us.
I will go wherever my talent and my art will take me and continue to work without thinking about gaining acceptance.

Who is one person from Pakistan, and one person from India who should work across the border, but hasn’t so far and why?
HM: From the Pakistani industry, I'd say Shaan. Whereas from India, I want Salman Khan to work in Pakistan. He's the biggest star in India and he has a huge fan following so why not?

Imran Abbas:
Imran Abbas. – Courtesy photo


Model turned actor Imran Abbas is regarded as a surprising and welcome addition to the Bollywood bandwagon.
After working in television serials like Mera Naseeb, Khuda Aur Mohabbat and Dil-i-Muztar, the young actor smoothly shifted focus to movies.
His first Pakistani film was Yasir Nawaz's Anjuman which failed to impress most of the audience.
However, that did not hinder the actor's progress as he was soon after offered a role in Vikram Bhatt's monster thriller Creature 3D opposite Bipasha Basu.
The Malaal actor talks to Dawn about his experience in Bollywood thus far:

Was working in India a goal you had in mind from the beginning of your career or did it just happen when the opportunity presented itself?
Imran Abbas (IA): No, I neither ever thought, nor harboured a goal to work in India.
Actually, acting itself was never an ambition. Basically, I am a trained architect and initially I just received a flood of acting offers which just kept on pouring in.
I don’t plan these things and never really imagined I would work in India.
But working in Bollywood is both a huge responsibility and achievement as it is a huge industry which offers one wide exposure.
Its actors have made names for themselves worldwide, so being part of this industry has been a big honour and one should not be embarrassed or ashamed to admit this.

How is audience reception different in Pakistan and India?
IA: I think the reaction and the reception has been similar in both countries. Everyone appreciates good work.
I have received great respect in Pakistan from TV audiences and probably because of that adulation in Pakistan I have received recognition in India. If I had not appeared on TV in Pakistan, perhaps no one would have recognised me in India so I am truly grateful for the recognition Pakistan has given me.
I am definitely garnering good reviews in India, which can be seen by the standard of projects I am being offered and the ones I'm already doing. This can be witnessed by the fact that I have been offered a couple of mainstream Bollywood projects and by the fact that I worked with Muzaffar Ali sahib, which I think is a big achievement as he is a great director who has worked with all of India’s screen legends.

Share your favourite moment/memorable story from working in India.
IA: I think working with Muzaffar Ali sahib was the apex of memorable experiences. Growing up as a classical singer myself, I used to listen ardently to the songs from his directorial venture Umrao Jaan.
It was always my wish to meet and work with a legend who has knowledge about classical music, about acting, about beauty; who knows about culture and traditions and myriad civilisations as well as literature.
I am also an art student so in my mind’s eye there is no one who fills all these attributes more than Muzaffar Ali sahib.
Other memorable moments which I will always remember include receiving compliments from legendary actors such as Dilip Kumar. Also meetings with Lataji (Mangeshkar) and Ashaji (Bhosle) remain special moments.
The interludes with these and others whom I grew up watching and admiring make up my most memorable moments.

Do you truly feel 100 per cent accepted across the border?
IA: No. It’s not like that. No one is ever accepted 100 per cent.
In a neighbourhood of 100,000 inhabitants, not all of those 100,000 will like you. There will be those who like you and those who don’t.
Anywhere in the world no actor or any human being for that matter receives 100 per cent acceptance. No one is ever totally happy with you or your myriad efforts and achievements.
Having said all of that, even though I have not garnered 100 per cent acceptance, whatever I have done is plenty and I would love to receive more love from India!

Who is one person from Pakistan, and one person from India who should work across the border, but hasn’t so far and why?
I think if the late actor Moin Akhtar had worked in India he would have been even more heralded and lauded than he already is. There was never such a brilliant actor as him in Pakistan nor is there now. I think he was one of the finest actors in the subcontinent.
I believe that Hina Dilpazeer would be much appreciated in India because she has an eclectic range and is able to perform diverse roles admirably, as well as Bushra Ansari who is similarly versatile.
I really hope that Amitabh Bachchan, who is a great actor and star comes to Pakistan and works in a project here.

Fawad Khan:
Fawad Khan. – File photo

Fawad Khan worked his way into the hearts of the Indian audience with incredible ease when his show Zindagi Gulzar Hai aired on India's Zindagi TV, followed by Humsafar, which is regarded as the most successful show in the history of Pakistani television.

He made his debut in Shashanka Ghosh's remake of the 1980 Hrishikesh Mukherjee-directed classic, Khoobsurat opposite Sonam Kapoor and became an A-lister overnight.
Although the film itself was an average grosser at the box office, it solidified Fawad's presence in the industry and along with his brooding looks, his acting chops were also noticed.
Unfortunately, the actor was not available to comment on his Bollywood experience.

Australia anti-terror police arrest two in Sydney

Australian police said they did not believe an attack was imminent
Counter-terrorism police in Sydney have arrested two men, charging one with possession of documents designed to facilitate a terrorist attack.

The other suspect was charged with breaching a control order.

The arrests were related to a series of counter-terrorism raids in September, officials said.
They come after Australia's prime minister said there had been heightened "terror chatter" since a cafe siege in Sydney last week.

That saw gunman Man Haron Monis, a self-styled cleric originally from Iran, take 17 people hostage in a cafe in the city centre. A 16-hour siege followed, during which two hostages and Haron Monis were killed.

On Wednesday, Australian Federal Police Deputy Commissioner Michael Phelan said the man arrested on the terrorism charge, 20-year-old Sulayman Khalid, had documents that mentioned potential government targets.

"I am confident that we've disrupted the activity that they were planning," he said.
But he added: "There is nothing that indicates at all that [there were] any specific targets or time frame in relation to this particular activity at all."

Two people and the gunman died in Sydney last week after a 16-hour siege

Mr Khalid, who did not apply for bail, could face up to 15 years in prison if convicted. The 21-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was also denied bail.

Judges can issue control orders against persons of interest in criminal cases, imposing restrictions on them. The 21-year-old man had breached an order preventing him from accessing certain forms of telecommunications.
'Terrorist sympathisers' After raids in Sydney and Brisbane in September, police said they had foiled a plot to "commit violent acts" in Australia, including a plan to behead a member of the public.

Police say 11 people have now been arrested and charged with terrorism-related offences since the start of the campaign, which began soon after Australia's terror threat level was raised to "high" for the first time.
Mr Phelan said the ideology of the group targeted in the raids was linked to that of militant group Islamic State, and that its members were accused of helping people travel overseas to fight with extremists.

After a meeting of the National Security Committee on Tuesday, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said there had been "a heightened level of chatter amongst people who we would normally think of as terrorist sympathisers".

"We don't know when and how an attack may come, but we do know there are people with the intent and the capability to carry out further attacks," he said.

'Keep going, Martin Place was just the beginning for you dogs': Melbourne extremist taunts police with vile tweets and claims to have joined ISIS in Iraq



  • Australian man claiming to have joined ISIS has contacted a Sydney activist on Twitter.
  • A vocal critic of ISIS in Australia, Zaky Mallah, engaged in a Twitter conversation with 'Abu Abdullah' who claims to be fighting with ISIS in Iraq.
  • After monitoring Abdullah's Twitter account Mr Mallah has found threats directed towards the Australian Federal Police.
  • He discovered that Abdullah's real name may be Jake and he has made contact with a friend he knew at Melbourne's Hume Islam Youth Centre.
  • 'He’s clearly creating a network of people he knows in Australia,’ Mr Mallah said:

A Melbourne man claiming to be fighting for ISIS in Iraq has tweeted a threat on social media to the Australian Federal Police and vowed to carry out a fatwa on Australia.
Zaky Mallah, the first person charged with terrorism in Australia was contacted on Christmas Eve by a man on Twitter using the name Abu Abdullah. 
ISIS IN IRAQ




Mr Mallah, 30, from Westmead in Sydney was jailed in maximum security for two years before being acquitted of terrorism charges. Just four hours into the Sydney siege counter terrorism police also asked him for an ISIS flag to help with their investigations. 
As a moderate Mr Mallah is now a very vocal critic of ISIS in Australia. It was because of this that he was contacted by Abdullah who he now believes is from Melbourne. Abdullah began tweeting him questions asking why he was against ISIS. Since then Mr Mallah has been monitoring Abdullah's other Twitter conversations.


‘What struck me the most was that some of things he said on Twitter were very disturbing and he also commented on the Australian Federal Police’s Twitter account calling them ‘dogs’,’ Mr Mallah said. 

‘What I think I have have learned from his conversations on Twitter with me and others is that he is an Australian called Jake who used to live in Melbourne. He’s already tried to make contact on Twitter with a friend of his at the Hume Islam Youth Centre (HIYC) in Melbourne.

On Christmas Day he let his friend know he was in Ramadi in Iraq 



On Christmas Eve ‘Abdullah’ tweeted a friend: ‘Remember me? Revert at hiyc, tall, white, skinny, long hair, we used to speak on Facebook.’ When his friend replied that he remembered him, Abdullah said: ‘I finally made hijra in August, I’m in Ramadi now.’ Ramadi is a city in central Iraq.
The HIYC is based in Motto Drive Coolaroo, Victoria, but no one could be contacted for a response.

Later on Christmas Day Abdullah tweeted: ‘That’s twice now I’ve seriously considered coming back and following Sheikh Adnani’s fatwa in Australia.’ Shaykh Abu Mohammad al-Adnani al-Shami is the official spokesman and a senior leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.


Abdullah tweets that he would only be too happy to see a fatwa take place in Australia  
On Boxing Day he replied to a tweet posted by the Australian Federal Police about two men who had charged by the Joint Terrorism Team in Sydney saying: ‘Keep going, Martin Place was just the beginning for you dogs.’


The police are taunted by Abdullah after they reveal that the Joint Counter Terrorism Squad had made arrests
While in another tweet he admitted to a friend he had been banned from Facebook for things he had written.
‘This guy is serious enough to leave Australia and join ISIS so all the signs are there. It’s a new Twitter account. We don’t know what he’s up to but through Twitter he’s clearly creating a network of people he knows in Australia,’ Mr Mallah said.

Security in Australia has been raised as the threat of ISIS attacks becomes more worrying  
In response to the revelations a spokesperson for the Attorney-General’s Department said they would continue to do all they can to support community leaders, who play 'a critical role in dissuading young Australians from becoming radicalised and travelling to the conflict zones to fight.'

'The government is committed to working with our communities to combat the radicalisation of young Australians and violent extremism. We have consulted with experts and with representatives of the community on the best way to keep the Australian community safe,' the spokesperson said. 


Mr Mallah, 30, from Westmead in Sydney was jailed in maximum security for two years before being acquitted of terrorism charges
In 2003 Mr Mallah was the first person to be charged with terrorism back after he made a video which Federal Police and ASIO said contained a planned suicide attack on federal government offices in Sydney.

A Lebanese Australian, Mr Mallah was charged under Australia's then new anti-terrorism laws after he made the video. He spent two years in the high maximum security Multi Purpose Unit at Goulburn prison awaiting trial, before being acquitted.

Since the rise of ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra he has become very outspoken against them. Today he sees them only as 'a barbaric cult' .

Aamir Khan’s ‘PK’ Is North America’s Biggest Foreign-Lingo Grosser Of 2014


PK


 Bollywood star Aamir Khan has outdone himself, just about. His current release, the Rajkumar Hirani-directed comedy/drama PK, has become the highest-grossing foreign-language film of 2014 in North America with a cume to date of $7.91M after two frames.

That sets it just below his mega-hit last December, Dhoom 3, which ultimately earned a touch over $8M at the North American box office — but PK could be on track to pass that. After opening last weekend to the biggest Bollywood bow of all time in North America with $3.57M at 272 locations, the UTV-released PK parlayed that into a $6.16M first week and added $1.75M this weekend at 264 dates. In a case of turnabout-is-fair-play, PK just leapfrogged Mexico’s Cantinflas, which was the foreign-language title holder before this weekend with $6.38M. Last year, it was Mexico’s Instructions Not Included which widely ended up the biggest foreign language title in North America, while Dhoom 3 came in 2nd.

ANUSHKA SHARMA



PK MOTION POSTER
PK now has an estimated cume in India of $51.6M and an overseas total of $17.8M (including North America). If the $51.6M cume at home holds after actuals are reported, and not taking currency fluctuations into account, that would catapult PK to the status of biggest Bollywood movie of all time at 327.6 crore — well beyond Dhoom 3‘s 284.27 crore, which at today’s exchange rate would equal $44.8M. It would also be the first time a Bollywood movie passes the 300 crore benchmark.

 



The story sees Khan as an alien who lands in the Rajasthan desert with a mission to study life on Earth. When the device that allows him to communicate with his spaceship is stolen, he sets out to find it while attempting to blend in. Ultimately, he heads to Delhi where the fish-out-of-water asks innocent questions that hold a deep and valuable meaning about the belief system that humans have created to reach God. There’s some controversy in India from religious groups against the film, but that hasn’t seemed to have dented box office at all.


It’s been a couple of very strong years for Bollywood globally including 2014’s Salman Khan-starrer Kick; Fox’s Hrithik Roshan vehicle, and Knight & Day remake, Bang Bang; and Shah Rukh Khan’s Happy New Year. When PK kicked off last week, it entered the North American Top 10 at No. 9 becoming the third Bollywood title to do so in recent memory, following Dhoom 3 and Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, both last year.




PK