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Advertised
as the revival of Pakistani cinema, Shoaib Mansoor's Khuda Kay Liye
is unlike any Pakistani, or for that matter Indian, film released
in recent times. Starring Shan, Iman Ali, Fawad Khan, Rasheed Naz
and veteran Indian actor Naseeruddin Shah, in a guest appearance,
the film is playing to packed houses and no doubt has the promoter
and distributor, GEO Films, laughing all the way to the bank - and
all this despite two fatwas being issued against it.
Khuda
Kay Liye is a sensitive film which revolves around three main characters,
Mansoor (Shan), Sarmad (Fawad Khan), and Mariam, aka Mary, (Iman
Ali). Brothers and pop stars, Mansoor and Sarmad are passionate
musicians who believe that music knows no bounds. However, their
growing careers and tight relationship are shattered when Sarmad,
misled into believing that playing or listening to music is a sin
in Islam, gives up his art and sinks into the abyss of fanaticism.
Born
and bred in Britain, Mary is Mansoor and Sarmad's cousin. Her father,
played by Humayun Kazmi, has been in a live-in relationship with
a British woman for years, yet when he finds out that his daughter
wants to marry her Brit boyfriend, he is struck by the spectre of
non-Muslim grandchildren. Thus, he tricks Mary into accompanying
him to Pakistan to meet the family from whom he's been estranged
for over 30 years. In Pakistan he urges his nephew Mansoor to marry
his daughter and to save his following generations from the fires
of hell. However, Mansoor refuses to wed Mary under false pretences.
Upon his refusal, Mary's father approaches Sarmad and asks him for
help. Sarmad, with his religious guide's beaming approval, takes
Mary and her father to Afghanistan where she is married off against
her will to her polar opposite.
Meanwhile,
in the wake of Mansoor and Sarmad's falling out, a disillusioned
Mansoor leaves Pakistan to study music in Chicago. There he meets,
falls in love with and marries fellow student and musician Janie
(Austin Marie Sayre). But the extremism he ran from in Pakistan
finds a new way of infecting his life: the 9/11 attacks lead to
his arrest by the FBI.
Shoaib
Mansoor has executed a controversial and thought-provoking story
with great finesse in Khuda Kay Liye. Contrary to popular belief,
Shoaib Mansoor does not use the film to point fingers at anybody.
Filled with various shades of grey, the film, through a wide spectrum
of realities, brings to life only one basic idea: Islam is not only
being misunderstood and misused by the West, but also by those who
claim to be its sole custodians.
One
of the best things about the movie is its realism. Several scenes
are cinematic representations of what most of us are thinking. Sarmad
questions the validity of and the sense behind the jihad the Taliban
and the Northern Alliance wage against each other in 2001. "How
can the murder of one Muslim at the hands of another be called jihad?"
he asks his religious guide. Then there is Naseeruddin Shah, who
plays the role of a liberal Muslim maulana. While delivering an
impassioned monologue on the principles of Islam, he says that Islam
comes from within an individual. Trapped in Afghanistan and married
to a man that she has come to loathe, Mary, a symbol of an oppressed
gender, prays for her unwanted child to be a boy so that he can
survive their barren life. And Mansoor, while being questioned by
the FBI, continues to stress that all Muslims are not terrorists,
and those that are terrorists are not Muslim.
Unfortunately, the casting has diminished the overall reality of
the film. Shan and Iman Ali, while giving good performances, are
miscast. In the first half of the film, Iman Ali looks too old to
be playing the role of a chirpy and naïve young girl who is
tricked into an unwanted marriage. Shan also suffers from the same
predicament: he looks too old to be playing the role of the optimistic
young man who believes in no evil.
Out
of the three lead actors, Fawad Khan is the most impressive. He
plays a very difficult role with maturity and great understanding.
But it is Naseeruddin Shah who, in just 15 minutes of screen time,
steals the show. Despite having to deliver extremely emotional dialogue,
his voice modulation is perfect and his expressions are spot-on.
The music of Khuda Kay Liye has the patent Shoaib Mansoor stamp.
Arranged by Rohail Hayatt, the songs are powerful but soft and,
above all, melodious. Mekaal Hasan Band, Ahmad Jahanzeb and Shuja
Haider - Shoaib Mansoor has used some of Pakistan's best known musical
talents to provide the vocals for the songs. The result astounds.
There is no doubt that the making of this film was an uphill task.
Actors, including Junaid Jamshed and Ali Zafar, backed out of the
film due to its controversial subject causing time delays, and a
fatwa was even delivered against its release by the late Maulana
Abdul Rashid Ghazi, who called the film un-Islamic. Even now, after
the film's release, there are religious factions who are advising
people with weak faith to avoid watching the film. However, despite
all the hurdles, Shoaib Mansoor has produced a film that could very
well prove to be the catalyst for the revival of cinema in Pakistan.
"Khuda Kay Liye says a lot of things that needed to be said.
And considering that it's a Pakistani film, Shoaib Mansoor and the
team need to be appreciated for a job well done," said a guest
present at the premiere of the film. There is little doubt that
the film is doing good business. People from all walks of life are
flocking to the cinema to watch Shoaib Mansoor's magnum opus, and
Prince and Cineplex, the two cinemas showing the film in Karachi,
have had to increase the number of shows to accommodate the overhelming
demand for tickets. "Given the opportunity, I could probably
watch it at least five more times," enthused Fatima Zakir,
a Shoaib Mansoor fan.
According to sources at GEO Films, the film is doing much better
than imagined. "Our box-office gross after the first week,
despite a limited release in selected cities of Pakistan, is over
one crore, which is excellent," said Mohammad Nasir, the central
content editor at GEO Films. A labour of love, Khuda Kay Liye is
a thinking man's film. And considering the attention this film is
getting from the masses, it seems that there is a large crowd of
Pakistanis who are more than ready to do just that: think. That
is a good omen not just for cinema, but also for the future of the
country.
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