North American Premiere
Fixer: The Taking of Ajmal Naqshbandi
| USA | 84 MINUTES | English, Dari, Pashto, ItalianDocumentary
Twenty-four-year-old Ajmal Naqshbandi is a "fixer," someone hired by foreign journalists to facilitate the gathering of news stories. In 2007 he was captured with an Italian journalist by the Taliban in Afghanistan. With the aid of his government and high levels of publicity, the Italian was spared, but the Afghan wan't so lucky. After the dust of his murder settles, Ajmal's friends, family, and his fellow abductee try to make sense of the harsh fate that befell him.
This emotionally mesmerizing documentary takes an intensely personal journey into the dangerous and unseen world of wartime news gathering, where nationality can determine the value of a life. A Westerner's abduction will make headlines around the world, but director Ian Olds' (Occupation: Dreamland) examines what happens for those who don't make the international headlines—in this case an Afghan. He achieves a weighty tension by mingling two storylines. Six months before his abduction, Ajmal amiably shepherds American journalist Christian Parenti from one dangerous interview with machine-gun-toting militants to the next. The chronicles of this assignment are interrupted by brutal, Taliban-shot images from the squall that was to come—Ajmal and journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo, mistaken for spies, bound and battered, captives at the mercy of a rogue army.
Cast & Credits
Ian Olds
Field Producer
Co-Producer
Director of Photography
Producers
Editor
Sound Design
Director
Contacts
Print Source
Winner: Best New Documentary Filmmaker.
As a result, this film will screen two additional times on
Sunday, May 3: 1:15 pm and 7:15 pm.
For tickets, click here.
Sunday, April 26, 1:00 pm
@SVA Theater (333 West 23rd Street), Theater 2
After the Movie: Director Ian Olds; author and The Nation reporter Christian Parenti; New Yorker staff writer and author of The Assassins' Gate: America in Iraq, George Packer; and former Afghan fixer Naqeeb Sherzad will further discuss the dangers encountered by both journalists in war zones and the native populations that help them get the stories to the world. Moderated by Bob Dietz, Asia Program Coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists.
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