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Movie Review:Khuda Kay Liye

April 5th, 2008 · 1 Comment

Being the first Pakistani movie to release in India, Khuda Kay Liye would be high on expectations from potential viewers. Lets see it this way, does Khuda Kay Liye make you think?

I thought it is a good film, but could’ve done with a bit of trimming.
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Certain events are explored in the film. Two musician brothers, liberal thinking Muslims from Lahore go different ways in life. The older one, Mansoor (Shaan) falls in love with music and goes to America to study it. The younger one, Sarmad (Fawad Khan) gets influenced by a ‘maulana’ and goes the fundamentalist way. A Muslim man Sher Shah (Hameed Sheikh) despite being a liberal Muslim all his life, suddenly wants his British daughter, Mary (Iman Ali) married off to a Muslim. Then, on September 11th , the World Trade Centre comes crashing down due to terrorist attacks and all hell is let loose. Muslims are hated in America and Muslims in Pakistan and Afghanistan hate America.

The film tries to explore the problems Muslims face within the community, with fundamentalists hating the liberal ones and also with the world after September 11th.
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Shaan has done an exceptional job as the musician who is wronged. His scenes in the prison cell are extremely well captured. Specially the ‘I Love Usama’ one. Genius writing. Fawad Khan is good, he’s got the role of a weak person which he executes with conviction. The shoot-out scene as well as his outburst in the court are worth a mention. Iman Ali is alright. Having such a large role, she should’ve worked more on her emoting. Whether she laughs or cries, it looks the same. Naseeruddin Shah is there for nothing more than 7 minutes, but is he effective. The courtroom scene where Naseer cites examples from various texts is hair-raising. He captivates your attention and how, leave alone the extremely fluent Urdu. Rasheed Naz is a revelation. He’s got a few dialogues here and there, but he’s extremely good. You can’t help but marvel at the way he manipulates Fawad Khan. Austin Marie and Hameed Sheikh are adequate.

Good Scenes:
1) The scene where the rehearsal for a New Year concert is taking place.
2) The ‘I Love Usama’ scene.
3) The courtroom sequences.

I would recommend Khuda Kay Liye to 2 kinds of people:
a) People who have the ability to digest that no religion is bad. It is only certain human beings in every religion that do bad things.

b) People who believe that humanism is more important than any religion or its laws.

Tags: movies · reviews · e-square · Post Author: Aneesh

1 response so far ↓

  • 1 badal // Apr 14, 2008 at 5:26 pm

    Khuda ke liye is hard-hitting. It’ll get you into a thought process for the next whole day. It’s brilliant screenplay and beautiful music has made it an appropriate theme for the biggest issue faced by the world today.

    Don’t watch it as a film, watch it as a lesson. We are so used to flipping pages of the newspaper, grasping the headlines. But we are ignorant towards what actually is happening. With this movie you will realize the worst truth the world is facing today.

    All know who Osama is, all know about September 11th, but does anyone know what brings our world to be in such a horrifying state?

    Khuda ke liye will open your eyes to a bigger picture of terror. It will show you how America has misunderstood itself, how Muslims have misunderstood Islam, how humans have misunderstood humanity.

    Awareness is the first step towards liberation, and this film makes you take it.

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