Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

International Guerillas

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Director
  
Duration
  

Language
  
5/10
IMDb

Producer
  
Genres
  
Action Film, Comedy

Country
  
International Guerillas movie poster
Release date
  
April 27, 1990

Writer
  
Nasir Adib (screenplay), Zahoor Ahmed (dialogue), Sikandar Khanna (dialogue)

Cast
  
,
Neeli
,
Javed Sheikh
(Javed), ,

International Guerrillas (Original title: International Gorillay) is a 1990 action film from Pakistan, originally released in the context of the Satanic Verses controversy, which portrays Salman Rushdie as its main villain. The film was made in the Urdu language; it also features several musical numbers including songs and dances.

Contents

The film was produced by Sajjad Gul who described it as purely commercial.

The Islamic world is in crisis with the publication of Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses. Rushdie wants Pakistan, the stronghold of Islam, to fall. Determined to foil his plans are a trio of brothers who form a holy army to destroy Rushdie. Rushdie plans to drive the final nails into the coffin of Islam by opening a new chain of Casino's and Disco's spreading contemptable vice and debauchery. Mustafa Qureshi, hen pecked to death by his demented wife, decides to call it a day with his day job at the Police station and induct his unemployed brothers to create a Mujahid (God's soldiers) trio whose sole aim is to seek out and destroy the despised Salman Rushdie before he manages to destory all virtue and decency on the planet.

Plot

The films protagonists are three Pakistani brothers, the older one being a police officer and the younger two, small-time hoodlums. The three brothers ultimately reconcile in the light of the controversy over The Satanic Verses: in a dramatized version of the Islamabad police firing on a mob on February 12, 1990 when five demonstrators were killed and 83 injured, their younger sister is killed by the police while demonstrating against Rushdie. The three brothers decide to avenge her and Islam’s honor by hunting down and killing Rushdie. They receive the help of a female police officer in the course of their mission.

Salman Rushdie, played by Afzaal Ahmad, is portrayed in the film as a sadistic criminal mastermind, working for an international organization devoted to destroying Islam (as the Muslim faith is an obstacle to his wishes of building casinos, nightclubs and brothels around the world). He is depicted as hiding in the Philippines, guarded by a private army led by an Israeli general. Saeed Khan Rangeela stars as "Chief Batu Batu", Rushdies main Jewish henchman. Rushdie lives a life of hedonism and other excesses and routinely amuses himself by torturing and killing the mujaheddins who regularly try to hunt him down. He also enjoys torturing Muslims by making them listen to readings of The Satanic Verses.

The protagonists arrive in the Philippines and start their hunt for Rushdie, who escapes them repeatedly thanks to the use of multiple decoys. In the course of one of their attempts to kill Rushdie, the three brothers appear wearing Batman disguises. The Israeli generals sister is sent to seduce one of the Muslim guerrillas but ends up falling in love with him and ultimately converting to Islam in the final scene.

The film ends with a gunfight opposing the four "International Guerrillas" and Rushdies army of Israeli henchmen. The heroes defeat the villains and, as Rushdie attempts to flee the scene, three giant Qurans appear in the sky and fire lightning bolts at the writer, incinerating him.

Cast

  • Ghulam Mohiuddin
  • Mustafa Qureshi
  • Saeed Khan Rangeela
  • Babra Sharif
  • Hamayun Qureshi
  • Naghma
  • Afzaal Ahmad as Salman Rushdie.
  • Temporary ban in the UK and response by Rushdie

    The film was denied a certificate by the British Board of Film Classification, effectively denying it a cinema release in the UK. The board cited the safety of Salman Rushdie as an argument for refusing the certificate, arguing that it could inflame some to violence.

    Although the film portrayed Salman Rushdie very negatively, he opposed the ruling of the BBFC, arguing that:

    As a writer, I am opposed in principle to the use of the archaic criminal laws of blasphemy, sedition and criminal libel against creative works, even in the case of a film which quite plainly vilifies me.

    The ban was overturned. Rushdie later said, "If that film had been banned, it would have become the hottest video in town: everyone would have seen it". While the film was a great hit in Pakistan, it enjoyed only a limited release in the West, where it went virtually unnoticed.

    References

    International Guerillas Wikipedia
    International Guerillas IMDb International Guerillas themoviedb.org