KABUL, Afghanistan -- The television set crackles with breaking news: Terrorists have smuggled a nuclear bomb into Kabul and are preparing to take out the Afghan capital.
There is panic and pandemonium. Facing imminent immolation, the nation's leaders turn to the only man who can save Kabul: Afghanistan's modern-day James Bond.
Hollywood may have plans to set part of the next James Bond film in Afghanistan, but Kabul already has its own 007.
His favored drink is thick Turkish coffee, not a vodka martini. He speeds across the movie screen in a Toyota Camry, not an Aston Martin. And Afghanistan's 007 has no on-screen love interest.
But "Nijat" - the Dari word for "savior" - kills with the same suave efficiency as Bond.
"Nijat" is the newest offering from Afghanistan's scrappy, low-budget film industry, still struggling to recover from years of Taliban repression. If all goes as planned, "Nijat" will debut next year as part of the fifth annual Kabul International Documentary and Short Film Festival.
"Afghanistan's film industry is coming out of the ashes," said Sonia Nassery Cole, an Afghan-American filmmaker in Kabul, where she is directing "Black Tulip," a motion picture about modern life in the volatile nation.
Afghanistan's movie industry was crippled by years under Taliban rules that barred films and shuttered cinemas.
Even though U.S.-led forces toppled the Taliban government in 2001, filmmakers in Afghanistan still face unenviable challenges.
The deadly blast from a suicide car bomber targeting the NATO headquarters in Kabul last month seriously damaged the nearby movie set for a biopic about Rumi, the region's celebrated 13th century Sufi poet.
The Taliban insurgency makes it impossible to film in large parts of the country. And the Afghan government, beset by corruption and nearly overwhelmed by Taliban fighters, offers little support for the country's underdeveloped film industry.
Last year, the government banned theaters from showing "The Kite Runner," afraid that the Hollywood movie's stark depiction of a Pashtun boy raping a Hazara boy would inflame ethnic tensions.
Filmmakers became so worried about the fallout that they delayed release of the film so they could spirit the four child stars out of Afghanistan.
"We are sandwiched between the Taliban and the government," said Latif Ahmadi, director of Afghanistan's state-run film commission, whose office windows were blown out by the October attack on the NATO headquarters across the road.
Ahmadi said he received about $50,000 from the Afghan government to make his film about Rumi. But he quickly ran out of cash and has shelved the film while he searches for more money.
Like the Rumi movie, Afghanistan's new James Bond film is decidedly low-budget.
The filmmakers used jury-rigged firecrackers and packets of red ink to simulate shootings.
Sympathetic diplomats have agreed to let the filmmakers transform their gated embassy into the headquarters of the fictional Afghanistan Secret Service.
And Afghanistan's 007 nearly crushed the movie screenwriter with his Camry when he confused the accelerator for the brake after a long day of filming.