‘Pride And Prejudice’ inspired ‘Unmarriageable’ set for 2025 shoot in Pakistan

The image shows "Unmarriageable" book cover. (Liberty Books)
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Updated 30 July 2024
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‘Pride And Prejudice’ inspired ‘Unmarriageable’ set for 2025 shoot in Pakistan

  • Pakistan’s Hum Network is partnering with US production houses to bring Soniah Kamal’s novel to life 
  • Sadia Ashraf wrote the script and will direct, this will be rare Western production to film entirely in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: US production houses Traveling Picture Show Company (TPSC) and Rising Tides have joined forces with Pakistan’s Hum Network for the screen adaptation of Soniah Kamal’s bestselling novel “Unmarriageable,” a literary adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice,” Variety has exclusively reported. 

Sadia Ashraf wrote the script and will direct alongside James McMillan, whose credits as a cinematographer include Avengers: Endgame and A Quiet Place: Part One. It marks a rare Western production to film entirely in Pakistan. Principal photography is slated to commence in early 2025 in Pakistan.

“Unmarriageable” transplants Jane Austen‘s themes to contemporary Pakistan, following the Binat family’s five daughters as they navigate modern life and South Asian courtship.

“We, along with our great partners, are thrilled to bring this beloved story to the big screen and to showcase the beauty and complexity of Pakistani culture to English-language audiences around the world,” Carissa Buffel, producer and partner at TPSC, told Variety. 

Kamal, the novelist, said her book “deals with the intricacies of navigating relationships, identity, and happily-ever-after’s – universal experiences shared by women explored through a unique lens.”

“We want to challenge stereotypes about Pakistan by showing authentic cultural diversity on screen through comedy, fashion and colors set in a rich architectural heritage rarely offered to American audiences,” Ashraf, the screenwriter and director, told Variety. 

“We are excited to partner with Traveling Picture Show Company and Rising Tides on our first American film,” said Sultana Siddiqui, the founder of Hum Network. “The film will showcase the vibrant lifestyle of Pakistani women, while also furthering Hum Network’s mission of sharing empowering female stories with a brand-new audience.”

TPSC’s credits include Sony’s Freud’s Last Session, Universal’s A Walk Among The Tombstones and A24’s The Blackcoat’s Daughter.

Founded by Ashraf, Rising Tides Films focuses on female-driven narratives and untold diverse stories. The company recently launched animated short Tomorrow and is developing around 20 film and television projects from cultures typically underrepresented on screen.

Hum Network is Pakistan’s female-led 24-hour entertainment TV channel founded by Sultana Siddiqui and her son Duraid Qureshi. Hum has produced hundreds of TV series with 700 hours of original programming annually for the last 18 years.


Bangladesh leader pushes for SAARC revival after meeting Indian, Pakistani dignitaries

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Bangladesh leader pushes for SAARC revival after meeting Indian, Pakistani dignitaries

  • Muhammad Yunus met Pakistan’s parliamentary speaker, Indian FM at Khaleda Zia’s funeral on Wednesday
  • SAARC has been dysfunctional since 2016, after India withdrew following a militant attack it blamed on Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: Bangladesh Chief Adviser Muhammad Younus this week pushed for reviving the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) platform after meeting dignitaries from India, Pakistan and other parts of the region. 

SAARC has been effectively dysfunctional since 2016, when its planned Islamabad summit collapsed after India withdrew following a militant attack it blamed on Pakistan. Islamabad denied involvement, but New Delhi’s decision prompted Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Bhutan to pull out, leading to the indefinite postponement of the summit.

Younus met Pakistan’s National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq and Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar at former Bangladesh premier Khaleda Zia’s state funeral in Dhaka on Wednesday. The funeral also saw a handshake between the Indian and Pakistani representatives, the first high-level contact between officials of the two countries since their conflict in May. 

“During the meetings, Professor Yunus repeatedly emphasized the need to revive the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC),” Yunus’ account on social media platform X said.

“We witnessed a true SAARC spirit at the funeral yesterday,” the account quoted Yunus as saying. “SAARC is still alive. The SAARC spirit is still alive.”

The Bangladesh leader said apart from Jaishankar and Sadiq, representatives from South Asia who attended the funeral included Nepal’s Foreign Minister Bala Nanda Sharma, Sri Lanka’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Employment and Tourism Vijitha Herath, and Maldives Minister of Higher Education and Labor Ali Haider Ahmed. 

Yunus said he tried to convene an informal gathering of SAARC leaders on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York last year.

His statement to revive SAARC follows that of Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who earlier this month also called for reviving the South Asian platform. 

Sharif’s message last month came as the bloc marked the 40th anniversary of its founding charter. The Pakistani premier stressed the importance of deeper economic collaboration and collective responses to shared regional challenges such as poverty, climate-induced natural disasters, food and energy insecurity, and public-health vulnerabilities.