'What People Will Say' stigmatises Pakistanis and it's based on true events

Pakistani-Norwegian director Iram Haq's movie wows at Toronto International Film Festival


Ians September 11, 2017
PHOTO: SNOWGLOBE FILM

TORONTO, CANADA: Pakistani-Norwegian actor-director Iram Haq's much talked-about film What People Will Say wowed audience at its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival.

This emotionally gripping family drama reminds one of the 1983 Bollywood movie Log Kya Kahenge (What People Will Think), in which Shabana Azmi plays the role of a young woman who is forced into marriage with a widower and how she takes revenge.

Mah-e-Mir wins big at Guam International Film Festival

What People Will Say is the story of a Pakistani-origin teenage girl caught between the East and West.

SCREENGRAB SCREENGRAB

Here is a Pakistani immigrant couple - played by Adil Hussain and Ekavali Khanna - in Oslo, strictly following their conservative Muslim culture in which their kids must preserve the family honour.

Their obsession with family honour forces their teenage daughter Nisha (Maria Mozhdah) to live a double life. At home, she bends to her parents' dictate. But outside, she does all that a typical western teenager does - trying a puff, drinking beer, friendship and kissing.

She hangs out late with her peers, but then also runs home to ensure that she is not caught by parents. Nisha crosses the threshold when she invites her white boyfriend into her bedroom and gets caught.

Women International Film Festival: Media’s exploitation of women must end

All hell breaks loose. "You have slept with him? You had sex with him?" asks the furious father. She becomes a stigma for her family.

An eerie sense of dread and doom lingers when the poor girl is dragged by her father and brother and put in a car and driven away.

She is then sent to Pakistan to live with her uncle's family and learn the domestic life that her parents will choose for her. As the events unfold, she ends up becoming a stigma for her Pakistani relatives too, and gets thrown out to be back in Norway.

SCREENGRAB SCREENGRAB

The contrast in Nisha's life - from a free-spirited teenager in wintry Norway to when she lands in hot, dusty and crowded Pakistan where she is virtually a prisoner - is captured superbly by the camera.

From director Iram Haq's perspective, this film is a bit of a personal story as she too, was taken to Pakistan by her parents as a teenager.

Manto to open Jaipur International Film Festival

"It's (what happened to Nisha) happened to me when I was a teenager... It is still happening (to young girls) in Norway and elsewhere."

She, however, denies trying to portray Pakistan in a negative light. "I am not making a negative portrayal of Pakistan, I am talking about the subject."

Adil Hussain and Ekavali Khanna have essayed the role of Nisha's parents with aplomb.

This is a film for the global audience.


Have something to add to the story? Share it in the comments below. 

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ