Moviegoers were excited with reports that said a minimum of a few Urdu films and some Punjabi movies were to peer the sunshine of day on Eid.
The only new Urdu film is Syed Noor's "Shareeka", but so as to be shown only in Lahore, the Dawn reported Monday.
However, three Pushto films was lined up in Karachi's cinemas -- "Toofan" starring Shahid Khan, Jehangir Khan, Sono Lal and Sahiba Noor, "Fakhr-i-Afghan" starring Shahid Khan, Asma Lata and Dua Qureshi, and "Ghaddar" starring Arbaz Khan, Jehangir Khan and Sobia Khan.
Meanwhile, the superhero known for his courage, cape and cowl in Gotham City, is back.
On Eid, the overall chapter of the Batman trilogy, "The Dark Knight Rises", is essentially the most mentioned film in Karachi.
Pakistani film distributors thought it best to showcase the Christopher Nolan-directed movie at the festive occasion of Eid.
Fans are waiting to look at Christian Bale, nevertheless it is Anne Hathaway and Tom Hardy who've impressed them the most.
The other big Hollywood catch is "The Expendables 2", the sequel to its 2010 edition.
Pakistanis are equally desperate to watch macho men Sylvester Stallone, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren and Bruce Willis, all of whom are famous for their action-packed antics.
However, Hasan, a worker at Nishat Cinema, said the movie business has changed over the years.
"English films on this area aren't watched with eagerness any more," he said.
"This happened after 9/11. Before that, Hollywood movies were a rage. Now only Indian films are received with excitement. For example, recently 'Bol Bachchan' did rather well on the box office."
On Pakistani films, Hasan says: "THEY'RE no good. They do not have content or anything to provoke the viewers with. Last year 'Bhai Loag' was screened. I DO NOT BELIEVE many of us liked it."