Kadurat for Daily Times /published 7th Aug
Kadurat
means grudge. And who can hold one better than Sanam Saeed, the famous star
from HUM TV’s latest so-called blockbuster drama that didn’t quite
bust-the-block as opposed to its previous success with ‘Humsafar’. Nevertheless
it confirmed identity to actors for the roles they suit best. The spotlight
shines on the sky-soaring Sanam to justify her grudge in this brand new drama crossing
its 3rd episode, in which her war this time is against a father,
step-mother and step-siblings for taking the place of the little princess she
was, just a while after her mother (played by Zhalay Sarhadi) left the world.
They keep showing a shot of the mother-daughter in which Zhalay praises her
daughter for having an amazing memory “meri
beti kuch nahi bhoolti” and that becomes the flashback-dialogue of the
episodes to come. The flashback accompanied by the fiddling of her eyebrow!
Most
of the first two episodes span across Minah’s childhood, the girl who enacts
this role made an outstanding performance with her angry little face and the
tussles between her father played by the award-wining ‘Best Menswear Designer’
Deepak Perwani, whose Guinness record for the world’s largest kurta is what he should really be
excelling in, until his dialogue delivery is worked upon further. Without prior
warning or preparation to his daughter, he imposes his second wife Atiqa, the
plum-lipped, deep soothing voice and tight frizzy curls played by Angeline
Malik, who assures her husband that she’ll eventually get accepted by Minah but
instead gets to hear in every new scene “ap
meri mama nahi hein”. Incidents occur and Minah goes to the extent of
hurting and pushing her and twice, has locked up each of her step-siblings in
the store room, which is far away from this big posh house with shiny marble
floors to its interior. Her new siblings Alina and Asad once all grown up are
played by Momal Sheikh, the Tapal girl and the recent award-winner of the Best
Actor, Imran Aslam.
The
stubborn little girl is sent to live in a hostel but pleads to her father to be
kept at home. There, girls her age pick on her but she befriends one girl,
Shaheen. In the meanwhile back home, Atiqa one day drops into Deepak’s office
to remind him of her degree in Business Management and suggests joining his
office. Upon hearing this he immediately offers her his chair, while his daughter
is shown in the hostel poking needles in pillows, stuffed toys and her roommates,
and getting deeper into finding resentment with everyone there.
Crops
harvest and time is shown to have passed by and finally Minah comes home all
grown up (into Sanam Saeed) but she doesn’t respond to greetings. She only
sports a superficial smile and offers Alina Pringles, but the box pops into her
face as a prank. That’s where you see her long, evil fit of laughter with
everyone else’s poker face staring back at her and she asks, “kesi lagi phir meri entry?” Soon after her settling in back at home,
Atiqa tries to make efforts of clearing the air but instead Minah snubs back
rudely and even tells her to ‘get out’!
The
3rd episode thickens the plot as Minah goes to meet Asad who has
climbed the ladder to CEO of her father’s company and seeing eyeball to eyeball
she leans in and tells her step-brother that she wants his chair and takes on
the dare to snatch the position he has earned. Asad/Imran owns up to his award
of being the best actor and his mini-role in the first two episodes was almost
a replica of him. But that suave businessman role didn’t quite befit him
naturally as opposed to the recent drama he was cast in, as a gambler and
drunkard. Overall he’s impressionable and grows on you.
Alina
is shown dining at Zouk with her Raj-Kumar, as she’d like to term it. Danyal is
the guy, played by Junaid Khan, who is now unfair to be defined as just the
former-vocalist of CALL the band, because he’s made a strong presence in the
drama circle with one project after the other; dramas and telefilms both. He’s
also leading a solo singing career with two video releases. Rumour has it that
he’s also about to host an Eid Show! Cute smiles, sparkly, love-struck eyes and
protruding biceps through stark white shirts; he’s the stuff silver-screens are
made for. But for now, he pursues Alina for marriage. Oddly enough, she resists
because Minah the troublemaker has come home and more odd is the fact that the guy
is more keen to get married in this case as opposed to the majority of girls
trying to find themselves suitors, and what a suitor indeed! Is Alina’s
too-good-to-be-true set up also going to be jinxed by prying eyes?
Deepak’s
earlier thick black beard is now shedding weight and colour both and he as
character is also shedding patience for his daughter, for whom he had claimed
to remarry in the first place, so that she’d have a mother again. He grows
intolerant towards her pranks and resentments and decides to show her to a
psychologist. Minah initially runs away from him but lands at that doctor’s clinic
the day her father has kept a dinner reception for Minah, telling one lie after
the other about her step-siblings.
The
direction by Aabis Raza is definitely worth praising and the story written by
Zoha Hassan has strong grounds for a grudge of this sort to have matured into
something seemingly dangerous and psychotic. The soundtrack is just ordinary
but the story and casting make up for that gap. Sanam’s tall, slouching and
square-like physique really help define her personality and she does great with
those head-down, closely set, piercing eyes to convey across her anger. Now
whether the audience goes completely against her, stereo-typing her as a
jealous and resentful girl, or whether they find sympathy and understand the
root-cause of her situation, is yet to be seen.


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