Creative collective Wild Gift has signed Pakistani-Canadian director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy for commercial and branded entertainment assignments in the U.S. Obaid-Chinoy is a global figure–a journalist, filmmaker and humanitarian widely known for her two Academy Award-winning documentary shorts: Saving Face (co-directed with Daniel Junge), a film about a plastic surgeon who returns to Pakistan to provide surgeries to victims of acid attacks; and A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness, the story of a woman in Pakistan who was sentenced to death for falling in love.
Named one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world (in 2012), Obaid-Chinoy is the first filmmaker from Pakistan to win an Oscar and the first female film director to have won two Oscars by the age of 37. Recently, it was announced that she will direct a highly anticipated upcoming Star Wars feature starring Daisy Ridley. Obaid-Chinoy will be the first person of color and the first woman to direct a Star Wars film. Last year, she helmed two episodes of the Disney+ series Ms. Marvel featuring the franchise’s first Muslim character, Pakistani-American teenager Kamala Khan who acquires superpowers similar to that of her hero, Captain Marvel. The New York Times included her episodes in its annual “Best Episodes of TV” list in 2022 calling them, “ingenious and surprisingly moving.”
“Sharmeen is in a class all her own,” said Wild Gift founder David Mitchell. “She’s a groundbreaking and dynamic global artist whose life has been dedicated to inspiring and enriching the lives of others. Sharmeen is a true, honest, and passionate storyteller who has a gift for creating meaningful work that transcends traditional marketing. She is amazingly talented and versatile, and I simply love her work. Throughout her career she has created powerful documentary work, emotional live action scripted films and vividly imaginative animation. There is nothing she can’t do.”
Obaid-Chinoy said, “At heart I’m a storyteller and I think that brands today are telling wonderful stories that go beyond the predictable. Stories that affect the consumer. Stories that affect our planet. Stories that affect all of us. I want to hold up a mirror to society. I want people to think about the decisions that they’re making. I think that brands are talking about things that they didn’t talk about before that may not be linked necessarily to their brand but definitely are linked to their consumers. If a consumer connects with what you stand for and what you champion and what your worldview is, you’ve already won the battle. These are the stories that speak to me, and I love Wild Gift’s unique ethos of creative and authentic storytelling. I look forward to working with David and his team in bringing these stories to life.”
No stranger to advertising, Obaid-Chinoy earlier in her career was repped in the U.S. commercialmaking space by Saville Productions. Internationally, Obaid-Chinoy directed an uplifting and popular Coca-Cola commercial for the Middle East/South Asia market for the 2018 FIFA World Cup that told the story of an aspiring young Pakistani footballer whose father created footballs for the World Cup by hand in their rural village. Obaid-Chinoy filmed the journey of this young man to Russia where he participated in World Cup opening ceremonies and witnessed his father’s handiwork deployed on the playing field in front of a world audience, further rousing his dreams to pursue a career in the sport.
“I want to continue to work with brands that say, ‘What is our place in the world today?’” said Obaid-Chinoy. “I think it is important for brands to tell stories that leave a lasting impact, that will make us rethink the way we see the world, rethink the way we’ve done things. For me the key is for a brand to tell a story that helps re-define humanity in some way, re-define issues in some way, re-define the way we see ourselves.”
Obaid-Chinoy has made over two dozen films in over 16 countries under her production house label SOC Films, a Pakistan-based film and animation production company, including her acclaimed shorts and other notable projects. Obaid-Chinoy is also the founder of Waadi Animations, Pakistan’s first female-led animation company. Waadi produced Pakistan’s first HD animated and highest grossing animated film feature film, 3 Bahadur and in 2020, Pakistan’s first animated short film, Sitara: Let Girls Dream, distributed globally by Netflix.
“For the last 20 years I’ve been talking about and championing the stories of men and women who are risking their lives every day and who are seeking grassroots change,” said Obaid-Chinoy. “I’m bringing that same approach to directing a commercial. How do we tell this story and how do we make the world root for you? How do we make your consumer root for you? That’s what I’m bringing from my experience and my work around the world.”
Although Obaid-Chinoy has dedicated much of her filmmaking career to shining a light on some of the most complex sociopolitical issues around the globe and has established herself a reputation for spotlighting the untold stories of women subject to injustice, she is also accomplished at telling engaging and entertaining tales of popular culture. Recently, she has been working on a documentary about fashion icon Diane von Furstenberg and is set to direct Paramount’s Brilliance, based on the best-selling suspense-fantasy novel by Marcus Sakey.
DOC NYC Unveils Main Slate Lineup: 31 World Premieres; 24 Films Making Their U.S. Debut
DOC NYC--the documentary festival celebrating its 15th anniversary in-person November 13-21 at IFC Center, SVA Theatre and Village East by Angelika, and continuing online through December 1--has unveiled its main slate lineup. The 2024 festival presents more than 110 feature-length documentaries (including yet-to-be-announced Short List and Winner’s Circle titles) among over 200 films and dozens of events, with filmmakers expected in person at most screenings.
Opening the festival on Nov. 13 at SVA Theater will be the U.S. premiere of Sinead O’Shea’s inspiring portrait Blue Road--The Edna O’Brien Story, a breakout hit from the recent Toronto International Film Festival that honors the legendary Irish writer, who passed away just a few months ago at the age of 93.
Closing the festival on Nov. 21, also at SVA Theatre, will be the world premiere of Peter Yost and Michael Rohatyn’s Drop Dead City--New York on the Brink in 1975, a look back at the circumstances and players involved in NYC’s mid-70s financial crisis. The festival’s Centerpiece screening on Nov. 14 at Village East is the World premiere of Ondi Timoner’s All God’s Children (also part of the festival’s U.S. Competition), a chronicle of a Brooklyn rabbi and Baptist pastor who join forces to create greater unity between their two communities, against all odds.
Included are 31 world premieres and 24 U.S. premieres, with eight of those presented in the U.S. Competition, for new American-produced nonfiction films, and another eight featured in International Competition, for work from around the globe. The Kaleidoscope Competition for new essayistic and formally adventurous documentaries continues, while the festival’s long-standing Metropolis... Read More