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Bhutto

  • 2010
  • Unrated
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
731
YOUR RATING
Bhutto (2010)
This is a documentary about Benazir Bhutto. Following in her father's footsteps as a pillar for democracy, Bhutto was expected to dominate Pakistan's 2008 elections but the assassination sent Pakistan politics into turmoil.
Play trailer2:09
1 Video
3 Photos
BiographyDocumentary

The story focuses on Benazir Bhutto's life, her 2008 assassination while campaigning for Pakistan's elections, its impact on the nation's democracy, and her legacy as an influential yet divi... Read allThe story focuses on Benazir Bhutto's life, her 2008 assassination while campaigning for Pakistan's elections, its impact on the nation's democracy, and her legacy as an influential yet divisive political figure.The story focuses on Benazir Bhutto's life, her 2008 assassination while campaigning for Pakistan's elections, its impact on the nation's democracy, and her legacy as an influential yet divisive political figure.

  • Directors
    • Duane Baughman
    • Johnny O'Hara
  • Writer
    • Johnny O'Hara
  • Stars
    • Aseefa Bhutto Zardari
    • Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari
    • Bilawal Bhutto Zardari
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    731
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Duane Baughman
      • Johnny O'Hara
    • Writer
      • Johnny O'Hara
    • Stars
      • Aseefa Bhutto Zardari
      • Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari
      • Bilawal Bhutto Zardari
    • 9User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Bhutto
    Trailer 2:09
    Bhutto

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast35

    Edit
    Aseefa Bhutto Zardari
    • Self
    Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari
    • Self
    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari
    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari
    • Self
    Asif Ali Zardari
    • Self
    • (as President Asif Ali Zardari)
    Sanam Bhutto
    • Self
    • (as Sanam 'Sunny' Bhutto)
    Victoria Schofield
    • Self
    Mark Siegel
    • Self
    Tariq Ali
    Tariq Ali
    • Self
    Steve Coll
    • Self
    Ahmed Ispahani
    • Self
    Akbar Ahmed
    • Self
    Peter Galbraith
    • Self
    Christina Lamb
    • Self
    Condoleezza Rice
    Condoleezza Rice
    • Self
    Feroz Hassan Khan
    • Self
    Husain Haqqani
    Husain Haqqani
    • Self
    John Burns
    • Self
    Fatima Bhutto
    • Self
    • Directors
      • Duane Baughman
      • Johnny O'Hara
    • Writer
      • Johnny O'Hara
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    7.6731
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    Featured reviews

    5Yxklyx

    Not Much More Than Propaganda

    While I appreciated some of the basic information given in the film. I found it to be too one sided on the whole. The film is more about Pakistan's political history rather than Bhutto herself and politics are generally not well suited for documentaries because there will always be radically opposing views. The film did not give much more insight to who really runs Pakistan than a reading of wikipedia would have given - now that would have made for an interesting film. Going into this I knew little of her but those thoughts were positive but coming out my thoughts are actually negative - obviously opposite to what was intended. I can't see her role as more than a figurehead. She belongs to an elite class (attended Harvard) and is from a radically different world than the vast majority of Pakistanis - so I can understand the foundations of distrust against her. Yes, she was charismatic but that's not enough to be a political power - she seemed out of her league and her presence in such a position of power, forced, likely installed by the elite class in the world. I don't condone the actions of the opposing faction but I can understand their antagonism.
    10citizens

    Powerful, Educational, Inspiring!

    I just had the honor and pleasure of attending the screening in Washington DC in the National Geographic Theater.

    After opening remarks from Speaker Nancy Pelosi to a capacity crowd of 400+ made up of members of Congress, State, USAID, press and the Ambassador of Pakistan and Benazir's sister we experienced a a film that I think exceeded all our expectations.

    Currently playing in London and Pakistan, it is about to be released nationwide in 70 theaters across the US.

    Additionally, it will air on PBS in 2011 as part of a Women's Week series of programming.

    Judy Woodruff held a Q & A with the Director and Producer and did a write up here: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/art/blog/2010/06/bhutto-doc.html <---go see the trailer.
    1muhammad394

    Corruption Queen of Pakistan

    There is nothing to see in this movie. Benazir was a corruption queen who looted Pakistan. Stashed corruption money in Swiss bank accounts. She was equally involved in corruption along with her husband Zardari who is known as Mr. Ten Percent in Pakistan for his non stop corruption.
    8ayesham34

    Benazir Bhutto-The Iron Lady of Pakistan

    Benazir Bhutto-The Iron Lady of Pakistan was a daunting personality all by herself. She was the first Muslim lady to become the prime minister of a Muslim nation not just once but twice. She was assassinated while she was running the campaign for the third term in Dec 2007 when she returned home after being held in exile for seven years. Bhutto-A documentary on Bhutto dynasty starts with the India-Pakistan partition in 1947 and leads to Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto's ascendancy to the presidency in 1971. The focus of the documentary swiftly shifts to his elder daughter, Benazir Bhutto, a magnetic yet beautiful person who was studying in Oxford carrying no passion to pursue politics ever in her life. But fate had decided the other way. Her father's reign was overthrown by a military coup Zia Ul Haq in 1977 and he was put into jail and later was executed on the charges of murder. This was the time when Benazir Bhutto came into politics and ran a campaign to save her father from the conspiracy charges but she failed to save him. Before Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto's death, he passed the mantle of his political party (Pakistan People's Party) to her daughter who later became the heartthrob of her people and got elected as prime minister of Pakistan in 1988, following the legacy of her father. She was also ousted by another military coup just to be re-elected in 1996. She was forced into exile after two years when she faced corruption allegations against herself and her husband Asif Ali Zardari who was arrested and put into jail for eight years. She later returned to Pakistan to run PPP for the third term which ended in her assassination on Dec 27, 2007. Benazir Bhutto anticipated her murder even before her return to Pakistan and she blamed it on the hands of General Pervaiz Musharraf. She was a true demonstration of courage with the mixture of unyielding that people in third world countries find hard to comprehend.
    8Danusha_Goska

    Maybe Benazir's Mission was Doomed

    I've always been fascinated by Benazir Bhutto. It's hard not to be. She was certainly stunningly beautiful. But it's more than that with Bhutto. She was a woman who was elected prime minister of an officially Islamic nation. You could read her calculating intelligence and her steely determination on her exquisitely beautiful face. You can also read there the great tragedy that stalked her family, and her nation.

    Bhutto also gave off an air of idealism. Bhutto believed in something bigger than herself, something for which she was willing to sacrifice her life. Sacrifice she did – Bhutto endured prison, and returned to Pakistan from exile knowing the nation she loved so much would probably kill her. It did. But there's great complexity in Bhutto's life, as well. She did some things that were not at all admirable. Her own niece accuses her of murder.

    The talking heads in this documentary compare the Bhutto family saga to a Shakespearean plot or a Greek tragedy. It's actually more high opera. Benazir Bhutto was a great beauty who renounced a personal life so she could pursue politics. She realized she would need a man to get over in a Muslim country, so she submitted to an arranged marriage with a very handsome playboy polo player. Bhutto stated publicly that were she not a woman politician in a Muslim country, she would not have submitted to an arranged marriage. Muslim norms prevented her from meeting a man she might fall in love with on her own. As in an opera, she fell in love with the husband her mother picked out for her. Some say he betrayed her by accepting graft; others say this is a political smear.

    "Bhutto" the documentary certainly presents the drama of Bhutto's life. Talking heads include her personal friends, her husband, her children, her sister, and her niece. Her friends speak of Bhutto in the most glowing of terms. Exactly because this is the realm of politics, one cannot take anything that anyone on screen says at face value. One thing I wish this documentary had offered was a reliable navigator, an authoritative voice helping me to sort politically expedient comments from solid facts.

    The film does provide contradictory voices on the question of corruption. A New York Times reporter insists on the accuracy of the Times' charges of the Bhutto family's corruption. Bhutto's friend insists that her lifestyle was not that of someone with the alleged unlimited funds. Another friend points out that Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto's husband, was kept in prison but never convicted.

    There's a lot of tragic and regrettable history up on the screen. Pakistan gets a nuclear bomb, fights wars with Bangladesh and India, supports the Taliban, hosts Osama bin Laden. The Bhutto family is depleted by one assassination after another. Benazir keeps trying to get and keep power in Pakistan. Her friends insist that this is so she can build schools, end polio, and provide clean water. Bhutto had other noble goals. She wanted to avenge her father's assassination. She stated that "Democracy is the best revenge." She wanted to serve as a liberatory example to women and girls – while maintaining a public, feminine, nurturing face. She wanted to reconcile Islam and the West, to prove that Islam and democracy are compatible.

    The documentary does not linger on horrific aspects of the Bhutto legacy. The Bhuttos, father and daughter, made sure Pakistan developed nuclear weapons and shared that technology with North Korea. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was president of Pakistan during the war with Bangladesh, a war that included massive human rights violations so severe some labeled them "genocide." Bhutto declared Ahmadis "non-Muslims." There was deadly persecution of Ahmadis in 1974, under Bhutto. Benazir Bhutto recognized the Taliban in Afghanistan. She didn't repeal the hudood ordinances.

    Pakistan has lots of problems, problems the United States didn't cause. The talking heads in "Bhutto" insist that America's eagerness to stem the spread of communism screwed up Pakistan. But the US was involved in Poland during the Cold War, and Poland did not turn into a country where any prominent person, from Benazir Bhutto to a schoolgirl who just wants to learn to read – Malala Yousafzai – risks assassination.

    America didn't cause the huge gap in literacy in Pakistan between women and men. It doesn't promote child marriage or hatred of Ahmadis and Christians. Benazir Bhutto tried to open schools and end polio. Pakistan's schools are now "ghosts" that take government funds and education no one. Polio workers are shot by Muslims who insist that the polio vaccine is an American plot to sterilize Muslims.

    Concerned observers often point out that India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh were all created at the same time from the same raw material: the former British subcontinental empire. India is doing relatively well. Pakistan is floundering. Why? One possible explanation frequently offered by geopolitical observers. Pakistan was founded as an Islamic state. Bhutto is shown taking the oath of office; she must swear that she is a Muslim in order to do so. Maybe Pakistan would be better off if it had not been founded on Islam. Maybe Pakistan would be better off if it were a secular state.

    Maybe Benazir Bhutto, for all her intelligence, was on a doomed mission. Maybe Pakistan as it exists today is not reformable. Maybe it would take an Ataturk, a Mao, or an Ann Coulter (invade their countries, kill their leaders, convert them) to make Pakistan a place where democratically elected leaders who improve their citizens' lives can peacefully hand over power to a succession of other democratically elected leaders, all of whom die peacefully in their sleep.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The first cut of the film, which premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival, listed Johnny O'Hara and Jessica Hernández as directors. Subsequent versions list the directors as Duane Baughman and Johnny O'Hara.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 18, 2010 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Benazir Bhutto
    • Production companies
      • Icon Television Music
      • Disarming Films
      • Eveready Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $100,202
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,275
      • Dec 5, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $100,202
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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