Chairing the committee is Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, who became Pakistan's first Oscar winner for co-directing the 2011 documentary 'Saving Face', which was about the survivors of acid attacks.
Other members of the panel are writer Mohsin Hamid ('The Reluctant Fundamentalist'), director Mehreen Jabbar ('Ramchand Pakistani'), actor Rahat Kazmi, filmmaker Akifa Mian, Samina Peerzada and arts academic Framji Minwalla, Variety reported.
Pakistan has sent only two films to the Academy Awards since the foreign language film category was created in 1956 - Akhtar Kardar's 'Jago Hua Savera' in 1959 and Khwaja Khurshid Anwar's 'Ghunghat' in 1963.
The deadline for submissions in the foreign language film category is October 1.
The Pakistani committee will have enough films to choose from, as after a few dormant years, the country's film industry is enjoying a revival, with 21 releases so far this year.
There is no stated government policy against Oscar participation in Pakistan but the issue seems to have been a "low priority" because of political turmoil and a "general lack of precedence within the film establishment", Variety reported.
"In all those years, Pakistan has been so preoccupied with coups, wars and religion that cinema has only been reduced to low entertainment by the powers-that-be. It is, of course, monumentally idiotic to ignore the power of cinema in the development of any nation's narrative.
