Waar movie director bilal lashari biography
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Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bilal Lashari is a Pakistani film director, cinematographer, screenwriter and occasional actor. He made his directorial debut film in Waar (2013), which holds the record of being the seventh highest-grossing Pakistani film. His next project is a remake of the 1979 film Maula Jatt. The film is titled The Legend of Maula Jatt, The Legend of Maula Jatt whose trailer was released on December 21, 2018. Lashari won awards in four categories at the ARY Film Awards 2014 for his directorial debut.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bilal Lashari is a Pakistani film director, cinematographer, screenwriter and occasional actor. He made his directorial debut film in Waar (2013), which holds the record of being the seventh highest-grossing Pakistani film. His next project is a remake of the 1979 film Maula Jatt. The film is titled The Legend of Maula Jatt, The Legend of Maula Jatt whose trailer was released on December 21, 2018. Lashari
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Bilal Lashari
Pakistani director (born 1981)
Bilal Lashari is a Pakistani filmmaker, cinematographer, screenwriter and occasional actor.[2] He made his directorial debut with Waar (2013), which at the time of release became Pakistan's highest-grossing film (currently 12th highest).[3] His next feature The Legend of Maula Jatt (2022) was a remake of the 1979 film Maula Jatt.[4] The bio broke box office records and became Pakistan's highest grossing bio. Lashari won awards in kvartet categories at the ARY spelfilm Awards 2014 for his directorial debut.[5] In 2024, he was awarded with the President's Sitara-i-Imtiaz for his contribution towards the Pakistani cinema.[6]
Early life and education
[edit]Bilal Lashari was born into a Baloch family. His father, Kamran Lashari, is a retired senior Pakistani bureaucrat who served as a Federal Secretary and did a lot in cultural preservation in Lahore, while his paternal grandfather w
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Going back to his roots: Bilal Lashari talks about making 'Pakistan's biggest film'
The Pakistani cinema is in recession.
There are many reasons why this modig claim rings true. The post-Covid era has hit the spelfilm industry hard; from decreased number of cinemagoers to overused narratives gracing the screens time and again, along with the infamous foreign releases hitting the screens at prime slots – the list of why Pakistani films can't seem to work grows endless.
From Waheed Murad's quintessential chocolate boy avatars to Shaan's dhoti-clad, a gandasa-holding knight in the shining armour to Ahmed Ali Akbar's gun-wielding antagonist, we have come a long way. And while others are trying to find contemporary ways of making it to the top, Bilal Lashari is going back to his roots.
As a handful of films make it big, there's one movie that has been on almost everyone's radar for several years now; The Legend of Maula Jatt,