Siddique Barmak - Afghan Director and Producer
Siddiq Barmak (Born September 7, 1962 in Panjshir, Afghanistan) is an Afghan film director and producer
. He received an M.A degree in cinema direction from Moscow Film Institute (VGIK) in 1987.
He has written a few screenplays and has made a few short films. His first feature film Osama won Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film in 2004.
There is a stylistic echo in Osama of the “Afghan” films by the Iranian Makhmalbaf dynasty - father Mohsen’s Kandahar and daughter Samira Makhmalbaf’s At Five in the Afternoon, the latter also shot in post-Taliban Kabul. Barmak directed Osama with significant funding and assistance from Mohsen Makhmalbaf; the Iranian director invested thousands of dollars in the film, lent Barmak his Arriflex camera and encouraged him to send the movie to international festivals, which eventually generated further funding from Japanese and Irish producers.[1] Barmak received “UNESCO’s Fellini Silver Medal” for his drama, Osama, in 2003.
Barmak is also director of the Afghan Children Education Movement (ACEM), an association that promotes literacy, culture and the arts, founded by Iranian film director Mohsen Makhmalbaf. The school trains actors and directors for the newly emerging Afghan cinema. Barmak is one of the celebrated figures in Persian cinema as well as emerging cinema of Afghanistan.
OSAMA MOVIE SYNOPSIS:
A 12-year-old Afghan girl and her mother lose their jobs when the Taliban closes the hospital where they work. The Taliban have also forbidden women to leave their houses without a male “legal companion.” With her husband and brother dead, killed in battle, there is no one left to support the family. Without being able to leave the house, the mother is left with nowhere to turn. Feeling that she has no other choice, she disguises her daughter as a boy. Now called ‘Osama,’ the girl embarks on a terrifying and confusing journey as she tries to keep the Taliban from finding out her true identity. Inspired by a true story, Osama is the first entirely Afghan film shot since the fall of the Taliban. Written by Anonymous
In Afghanistan, during the Taliban regime, women are forbidden to work and to walk on the streets without
the company of a male. The teenager girl Osama (Marina Golbahari) cuts her hair and dresses like a boy to get a job and support her widow mother and grandmother. There is no men in her family, since her father and her brother were killed in previous Afghan wars, and the family has no means of survival. When Osama, disguised as a boy, is called by the Taliban to join the school and military training, the boy Espandi (Arif Herati) tries to help her. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil


January 15th, 2009 at 8:12 am
we proud of you Mr Barmak
January 16th, 2009 at 9:42 am
non of those people represent afghanistan exept Siyar Bahadurzada and Mr Siddique Barmak, personally i just love that two guys.
July 26th, 2009 at 10:03 pm
Goodluck! : )
November 13th, 2009 at 7:02 pm
I like you film Osama it is a very good film
and we Afghan are proud of you Mr Barmak
you are a very good director goodluck