Ten years later, Afghans enjoy movies once banned

By Jonathan Saruk, Reportage by Getty Images

The lights go down and the projector whirs into action as Sher Mohammad, 35, begins his routine, bouncing back and forth between two projectors, winding reels, and adjusting the carbon arc lamps inside the projectors. Below him in the gallery of the Temorshahee Cinema, men sit in their shalwar kameez (the loose-fitting pants and knee-length shirts that are common in Central Asia), sipping mango juice, smoking cigarettes, clapping and sometimes even dancing together on the theater stage as Pakistani women sing and gyrate across the screen.

Jonathan Saruk / Reportage by Getty Images

A projectionist works in Park Cinema in Kabul, Afghanistan. Going to the movies, once banned under the Taliban, has become a popular form of entertainment in Kabul, but women and children rarely take part.

Only 10 years ago, this would have been unthinkable in Kabul – the Taliban had banned, among other things, going to the movies. Theaters sat idle for years and fell into disrepair.  But with the fall of the Taliban, projectionists like Rahmatullah Amane, 36, who had fled to Pakistan during the civil war and worked in a matchstick factory in Kashmir, put the cinemas back together in Kabul, piece by piece

Jonathan Saruk / Getty Images

A projectionist works on a hulking projector at Temorshahee Cinema.

“The place was destroyed,” said Amane, describing the Temorshahee Cinema in the Old City of Kabul after the Taliban fled. “We had to pick up parts and put things back together, taking pieces from all theaters.” After seeing the transformation, the new Afghan government asked him to restore a second classic Kabul theater, Park Cinema. He headed there right away. “We worked 24 hours a day to get it running. Everyone could feel the freedom and was happy,” Amane said. “It was like being born again.”

Jonathan Saruk / Reportage by Getty Images

The projectionist inspects a film at Ariana Cinema in Kabul, Afghanistan.

The draw of cinema started early for Amane. “When I was 13 years old, I saw a James Bond movie, the one with Jaws. I knew then that I wanted to be in the movie business.” While at Park Cinema in Kabul's Shawr-e-Naw neighborhood, Amane began apprenticing under a projectionist. Twenty years later he works 12 hours a day, seven days a week at the most technically advanced theater in the city, Ariana Cinema.

Today there are about a half dozen movie theaters that operate around Kabul, some of which are publicly funded, others restored by international donors. Older Pakistani and Indian films dominate the repertoire, but there are occasional American films and the rare Afghan one. Only matinees are shown and during the week attendance is low. Most moviegoers come from the large ranks of the unemployed. Young children are rarely seen at the movies, and women, while technically allowed to go, never attend. Amane blames that on the constant threat of bombings: "If security improves, they will come again."

Jonathan Saruk / Reportage by Getty Images

A projector shows a Bollywood film at Ariana Cinema in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Until that happens though, Amane generally sees a bleak outlook for the cinema business: "The future looks dark."  He says that the availability of DVD players, which allow families the convenience and safety of watching movies at home, are also hurting the business. He is even reluctant to encourage his 8-year-old son, who is eager to learn about the movie industry: "I don't want my kids to go into the business."

In most of the theaters, two behemoth Indian projectors, generally 30 to 40 years old, sit in dimly lit rooms where their servants must switch between the two, constantly changing the 20-minute reels to prevent interrupting the film. Almost all of the machines in Kabul use carbon arc lamps to produce the light that projects the film, a technology that was mostly replaced in the West during the 1960s. Two sticks of carbon are aimed at each other and an electric current is run through them, creating an arc that produces light. The distance between the rods must be constantly adjusted by the projectionists to maintain the electric arc. The rods themselves must also be changed several times during a movie. In short, projectionists in Kabul are rarely sitting still.  The one exception is Amane's Ariana Cinema, which uses more modern Italian machines, thanks to a French cultural grant.

Jonathan Saruk / Reportage by Getty Images

The audience watches an Indian movie at Ariana Cinema.

On a recent Friday afternoon at Pamir Cinema in the Old City of Kabul, the busiest day of the week, a standing-room-only crowd of several hundred young men in a smoke-filled room cheer on the hero of a Pakistani film as he seeks revenge against the villain. Match-heads flicker constantly, throwing flashes of light across the darkened theater as the men chain-smoke throughout the film. Cellphones ring, and men occasionally yell across the crowded room to locate friends. On stage a young boy dances with his hands raised in the air, illuminated by the projector, as his friends in the front of the audience cheer him on. Perhaps the only other place one sees such public jubilation by Afghan men is at weddings.

Jonathan Saruk / Reportage by Getty Images

Afghans look at movie posters outside of Pamir Cinema in Kabul.

Related coverage:

World Blog: Kabul rocks...with music

Afghanistan: What have we achieved? What's next?

Young Afghans reflect on changes 10 years after U.S. invasion

PhotoBlog: 10 years in Afghanistan: With US troops on a mountaintop outpost

Discuss this post

It great to see the movie revival... Bravo!

It time to build imagination...again

  • 7 votes
Reply#1 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 10:50 AM EDT

Is there anyone out there who can give me ONE good reason why we should give a damn about this pathetic country that we have NO business messing with?????????????

Lets get our valuable troops out of that sh@t hole and go back to ignoring Afghanistan.

It is time to dump Obama for not keeping his promises to end these useless wars.

  • 2 votes
#1.1 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 11:32 AM EDT

Close: give me ONE good reason why we should give a damn about this pathetic country

As they say, "There but for the grace of God go I." It's only the luck of the draw that you were fortunate enough to be born in the United States, and you would condemn your brother for being poor.

It is time to dump Obama for not keeping his promises to end these useless wars.

BTW, guess who got us into this heartbreaking mess...

  • 6 votes
#1.2 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 11:47 AM EDT

Is there anyone out there who can give me ONE good reason why we should give a damn about this pathetic country that we have NO business messing with?????????????

ONE good reason?

I believe you will find major American movie companies exploiting this move!

I could give you more, but American "Greed" is more than sufficient.

  • 1 vote
#1.3 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:16 PM EDT

The only people that interested in theses news are the people in the movie industry...Why not?

Especially the porn industry...

    #1.4 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:29 PM EDT

    Why is this headline news? Who cares what these people are watching? The only thing I care about is that we are spending trillions of dollars doing who knows what in that country. Money that could be much better spent here at home.

    • 2 votes
    #1.5 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:33 PM EDT

    mozzie-600 "It's only the luck of the draw that you were fortunate enough to be born in the United States, and you would condemn your brother for being poor."

    Hi Mozzie, thanks for your kind note.

    However, the fact that I was lucky enough to be born in the United States does NOT mean we should be stupid enough to want to be the worlds police force and to venture into countries where we are neither welcome nor helpful.

    Further, it was "W", the "W"orst president in history who got us into two wars, (one immoral war based on lies). Bush and Cheney are not yet sitting in prison for war crimes.

    But our new FAILURE of a president has NOT ended the wars as he promised.

    Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize, then turned around and doubled troupe strength in our USELESS invasion of Afghanistan.

    As I stated; Time to dump OBama!

    Time to get our troops out and return to ignoring Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the rest of the pathetic excuses for countries that we continue to send rivers of money for oil to. It is past time to fend for our own country, our own poor, unemployed, sick, our own hospitals, schools, and jobless. Period!

    • 4 votes
    #1.6 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:32 PM EDT

    So, my original question remains unanswered;

    Is there anyone out there who can give me ONE good reason why we should give a damn about this pathetic country that we have NO business messing with?????????????

    • 1 vote
    #1.7 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:38 PM EDT

    What exactly did Obama do to "win" the Nobel peace prize?

      #1.8 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:45 PM EDT

      Afghan MEN enjoy the movies. See any women in that photo?

        #1.9 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:13 PM EDT

        @whosaid: Actually, the women are afraid of bombs (justifiably); when it's safer, they will come out.

        • 1 vote
        #1.10 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 4:19 PM EDT
        Reply

        And it's one, two, three, what are we fighting for? I don't know I don't give a damn, next stop is the Afghan...

        five, six, seven open up the pearly gates, no time to wonder why yippee! We're all goin to die!

        • 1 vote
        Reply#2 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 11:02 AM EDT

        What can you say, other than... cool as Hell!! =)

          Reply#3 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 11:03 AM EDT

          Does this mean 'Debbie Does Dallas' will play in Afganistan?

          • 3 votes
          Reply#4 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 11:14 AM EDT

          See what is happening in the Middle East America? The oppression is beginning to break. The oppression that inspires the terrorists to attack others out of aggrevation and hate at being oppressed is beginning to swamp over the terrorist leaders. Once freedom and self expression begin to flood into the Middle East with the fear of being killed for expressing ones self the terrorist acts will subside into the depths of the ocean at exactly the same place where Bin Laden is buried where the notion of oppression will be kept, bound for all eternity by the tendrils of the Leviathan.

          The goal of spreading freedom will not end in Afghanistan or Libya. Lifting the veil of oppression will spread to Syria and Iran and into Communist China and North Korea where liberty will ring.

          Keep to your guns on taking out the terrorists in the Middle East and freeing artistic expression from the soul of the Middle Easterner and the war against terrorism will be won.

          • 3 votes
          Reply#5 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 11:20 AM EDT

          ^^^ LOL

          Man, are you brainwashed. I believe we'll be a past symbol of a nuclear holocaust before all that is accomplished. Are you suggesting America invade, conquer, all these countries?

            #5.1 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:19 PM EDT
            Reply

            Ten years of watching nothing but the director's cut of King of the Khyber Rifles must have been a drag.

            • 2 votes
            Reply#6 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 11:59 AM EDT

            After 10 years of war and countless lives.. this is what we have to show for it!!!!
            We gave them precious freedom...and this is what they do with it.

              Reply#7 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:02 PM EDT

              They are doing what they want to do with their lives. as much as possible. Sounds like the definition of freedom to me. What did you want them to do with the "precious freedom " you so generously gave them?

              • 2 votes
              #7.1 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:07 PM EDT
              Reply

              DAH!!!??? 15,000 AMERICAN linguists-translaters have been fired because they are gay since the beginnings of war in IRAQ. Now they are saying it's the translaters that are creating safety in Afganistan? GEE, too bad we don't have our own American translaters so we can be sure of what's being said! Who are the stupid ones this time?

                Reply#8 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:37 PM EDT

                I am willing to bet that you pulled the number 15,000 out of your @$$. That number would constitute the rough number of gay troops in the US armed services is my guess. And most linguists/translators are Afghanies anyway. Your comment is baseless and I lost 10 seconds of my life reading it. What a waste.

                • 2 votes
                #8.1 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:21 PM EDT
                Reply

                Well gee, that makes it all worthwhile. Glad we could help.

                • 1 vote
                Reply#9 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:49 PM EDT
                madmax13Deleted

                Well it certainly was worth 10 years and billions of dollars and thousands of lives. Worlds largest opium producer - AND movies too. See MSNBSTOOPID story about single mom who abandons her kids to keep us safe from Afghan opium and movies.

                • 1 vote
                Reply#11 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:21 PM EDT

                What a shame that when they do regain the freedom to watch films again they watch "Pakistani women gyrating across the screen" instead of films that might actually teach them something useful or educational. I have nothing against sexy films but these men already see women as objects and barely human so I think it would be better for them to see something that elevates their minds instead of keeping their minds in the gutter.

                  Reply#12 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:24 PM EDT

                  Um.. Afghanistan is not the Middle East.  Just wanted to point that out.

                    Reply#13 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:30 PM EDT

                    Afghanistan is tribal, corrupt, dope ridden pile of rocks that wil revert to its basic nature as soon as we pull out. On the bright side side at least its not on our border.

                    • 2 votes
                    Reply#14 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:31 PM EDT

                    but....NO WOMEN ALLOWED ... right???

                    Women can't drive

                    Women can't vote

                    Women can't be seen

                    Women can't speak

                    But the men can watch women on the screen RIGHT....

                    Why would we back such things....very scary place and mindsets...we best beware...

                      Reply#15 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:53 PM EDT

                      This is what 10 years of war and 1000+ American lives have accomplished?

                        Reply#16 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:53 PM EDT

                        I've been wonderin' why we are still over their in that s##thole. Now I see....movies and popcorn! Guess it's all worth it now huh? Only billions spent and thousands of lives and limbs.

                        Meanwhile, Rome burns.

                          Reply#17 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:53 PM EDT

                          Hmm... judging by the looks on the patrons' faces, it must be a film by M. Night Shyamalan.

                            Reply#18 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:58 PM EDT

                            Ten years later, Afghans enjoy movies once banned

                            Umm, no. Ten years later, Afgan men enjoy movies once banned.

                            • 2 votes
                            Reply#19 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:08 PM EDT

                            I love the way photographers (journalists) take close ups of groups and then act like it was a big deal when only a handful of people were actually involved!!! STOP trying to make the news and just report it for ONCE! PLEASE! STOP pushing your agenda down our throats...do you actually believe we don't know what you are doing!!!

                              Reply#20 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:19 PM EDT

                              Most expensive movie seats ever!! Thousands of American lives lost and billions upon billions of dollars spent to bring these peasants into the movie house. Who cares. You can't escape the utter stupidity of it all and what it has done to my beloved America.

                                Reply#22 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:31 PM EDT
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