On the surface, Asim Abbasi’s directorial debut appears to be a story of love and family. Delve a little deeper and it reveals itself to be about time – the way it binds us and divides us – and a narrative about memory and its secrets, how it is subjective and easily manipulated, never the same for any two people. The film opens with idyllic images of childhood. We see Zareen (Aamina Sheikh), Zara (Sanam Saeed) and Zain (Faris Khalid) playing in the family home on their lands in interior Sindh. They do not seem to have a care in the world, content with whiling away their time in each other’s company. As the film jumps to the present, things are less ideal. We see Zareen single-handedly managing the household and caring for her ailing parents (Mohammad Ahmed and Beo Raana Zafar). She oversees electrical repairs in the family’s Karachi home, makes sure her parents are taking their medicine on time and travels to the farm to supervise the harvest.
When her father, Siraj, is hospitalised due to heart disease, we are introduced to her siblings. Zara is aloof, living in London for the past 10 years, having left Karachi after a car accident in which she had seriously injured a young boy near their home in Sindh. Zain lives in New York with his wife and son and his role in the family is limited to the occasional Facetime call. The story moves quickly in the beginning — the characters are unveiled abruptly, thrown into the turmoil of their father’s illness. Zara returns to Karachi, driven by a sense of obligation and guilt. Zain remains a distant spectator, checking up on the others through his Facetime calls, offering to come home but, ultimately, choosing to stay away.
As the narrative progresses, things are left unsaid among the characters. There is tension between Zara and her father, but we do not know why; Siraj’s nurse, Romeo (Adnan Malik), seems to have a strangely awkward bond with Zareen that is rooted in the past but we do not know where it comes from; and while Romeo has only now been employed to care of Siraj, he is already integral to the family but we don’t know why.
The narrative soon begins to meander. We are often left wondering where the story is going and it feels like we are unnecessarily treated to scenarios that repeatedly display the personality quirks of various characters.
The story is given very little breathing space. Conflict presents itself at the very beginning and the audience is not given a chance to get to know the characters outside of it.
The film’s cinematography seems to compliment this narrative of half-revealed truths. Shots inside the family home are half-lit and framed in shadows; the characters’ present actions unfold in pools of light but there is a sense of details hidden just beneath the surface.