Journalist and documentary filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy became Pakistan’s first Oscar winner last night when her film Saving Face won best documentary short.
Saving Face tells the story of two women (39-year-old Zakia and 23-year-old Rukhsana) who were severely disfigured after becoming victims of acid attacks. According to the film’s website:
Every year in Pakistan, at least 100 people are victimized by brutal acid attacks. The majority of these are women, and many more cases go unreported. With little or no access to reconstructive surgery, survivors are physically and emotionally scarred, while many reported assailants – typically a husband or someone close to the victim – are let go with minimal punishment from the state.
The film follows Dr. Mohammad Jawad, a British-Pakistani plastic surgeon who traveled back to Pakistan in order to assist Pakistan’s acid attack victims. During her acceptance speech Obaid-Chinoy dedicated the award to Dr. Jawad, Rukhasana and Zakia, and “to all the women in Pakistan who are working for change.” She added, “Don’t give up on your dreams.”
Hopefully Obaid-Chinoy’s Oscar win will mean that more people in Pakistan will have the opportunity to see the film. The filmmaker told the Wall Street Journal in November that she planned to show the film in private venues and recently told the Asia Society that “contractual restraints” prevented her from showing it to large audiences.
HBO will be broadcasting Saving Face on March 8. Mark your calendars.
Kumail Nanjiani was freaking out on Twitter because Sharmeen allegedly went to high school with him. Small world
I saw that! Apparently he knew her husband back then too.
How do I do more than just watch this?
Excellent question. A list of the film’s official NGO partners can be found here.
The official site also has a “Get involved” page.
very nice post, solid information
Thanks for sharing… I don’t have a t.v. and don’t follow Oscars and such, so I wouldn’t have found out about this documentary otherwise. It looks really interesting… I hope they do a screening in Boston sometime. Does anyone know how long it actually is?
All of the films in the documentary short category have a total running time of 40 minutes or less
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