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Lausanne Underground Film & Music Festival (LUFF) 2021 Presents a Retrospective of Pakistani Director Jamil Dehlavi

The 20th edition of Lausanne Underground Film & Music Festival 2021 will take place from October 20th to 24th.

This year, the () celebrates its 20th anniversary refusing, still and yet again, to conform to the constraints of mainstream by showcasing underground and eclectic artistic projects. A selective retrospective of Pakistanis director is in the programme that has just been unveiled. The full line-up of the Festival is now online on the Official Website.

Beyond Pakistan : The Mystical Cinema of Jamil Dehlavi
In the presence of Jamil Dehlavi

A visual storyteller guided by his intuitions, Jamil Dehlavi has been eluding all attempts at classification for over 40 years. Born to a French mother, he grew up in Europe, following the relocations of his father, a Pakistani diplomat. He then studied law in England, cinema in New York, and returned to Pakistan to make his first films… before being temporarily thrown out of the country! His films are, of course, like him, shifting yet stable, never totally fitting into a single genre, culture or dogma, but open to a horizon of possibilities. The films in this program were mainly shot in Pakistan, Turkey and on Réunion Island. They share a desire to go beyond surface appearance, a common visual force that propels their stories beyond politics or religion, reaching a redeeming spiritual depth. More than a retrospective, this cinerama is an invitation to discover a striking universe where the mystical and the rational mingle, where traditions have survived modernity, and where the sacred is never far from the profane.

The films:
– Jamil Dehlavi, 1980, Pakistan / Royaume-Uni, 106′
– Jamil Dehlavi, 1987, Royaume-Uni, 83′
– Jamil Dehlavi, 1992, Royaume-Uni, 122′
– Jamil Dehlavi, 1985, Royaume Uni / France, 27′
– Jamil Dehlavi, 1975, Pakistan, 51′

About the author

Adriana Rosati

On paper I am an Italian living in London, in reality I was born and bread in a popcorn bucket. I've loved cinema since I was a little child and I’ve always had a passion and interest for Asian (especially Japanese) pop culture, food and traditions, but on the cinema side, my big, first love is Hong Kong Cinema. Then - by a sort of osmosis - I have expanded my love and appreciation to the cinematography of other Asian countries. I like action, heroic bloodshed, wu-xia, Shaw Bros (even if it’s not my specialty), Anime, and also more auteur-ish movies. Anything that is good, really, but I am allergic to rom-com (unless it’s a HK rom-com, possibly featuring Andy Lau in his 20s)"

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