Last night's premiere of Rangreza has left me conflicted.
Aamir Mohiuddin's directorial debut has been called a musical film and I was excited when the first song by Abida Parveen and Asrar Shah came out. 'Phool Khil Jayen' is to date the best song in any recent Pakistani film and it piqued my interest.
Rangreza turned out to be a love story between a pop rock star Ali Zain (Bilal Ashraf) and a young woman from a qawwal family Reshmi (Urwa Hocane). Reshmi is betrothed to Waseem (Gohar Rasheed) who is more territorial about Reshmi than in love. The story progresses with a clash of backgrounds, a love triangle and a message on the importance of family support.
Heading in to the film. I was fully prepared for the film to either be surprisingly good or a let-down. What I didn't expect was feeling... meh.
Here are thoughts I had during Rangreza.
1) "The film's irregular pacing may tire people out."
Ali's father says at one point, "Now things are going to heat pretty much" and that describes how every new conflict in the film occurs... with a quite a bit of intensity. But then there would be no momentum for that and we'd lose interest in that plot.
Barely 15 minutes into the film, Ali is introduced to Reshmi and is smitten by her. But it's only after the interval that they really fall for each other and the romance grows. Yes, that is a really long time to wait for the inevitable.
What happens in the meantime? Ali is swooning over Reshmi, who is upset that his star power has created rumors, rumors that her family doesn't appreciate. After a while I was just wondering "So are you guys getting together or not? Do you even like each other?"
I think Rangreza has the same issue that almost every Pakistani film has and that is of a weak script. Had the script been tighter and the film at least half an hour shorter, it wouldn't feel so all over the place.
2) "Waseem Wallay's eccentric antics were a bit too far-fetched"
Gohar Rasheed is one of the few promising actors in the industry but I thought his performance as Waseem suffered due to shallow writing.
When we're introduced to Waseem, he is shown as eccentric and unpredictable in all the wrong ways. He is highly volatile, never thinks through and lashes out whenever he gets the chance.
I honestly felt as though Waseem's self-destructive tendencies were symptomatic of a mental illness, but that's never confirmed in the movie. I'd have preferred this to be Waseem's story, it would have made it believable.
Instead, Waseem's constantly varying tone of speech, odd body language and inability to pick up on social cues is presented as funny and that irked me. Waseem looks like the guy who would cry on Joffrey's death in Game of Thrones.
Gohar Rasheed still managed to captivate the audience with his fluent movement and powerful body language, proving he can do anything. But it was the lack of explanation for his abusive tendencies that didn't win me over.
3) "The film doesn't caricature conservative parents — and that's a good thing."