Haq Movie Review In Hindi: ‘Sometimes only love is not enough, respect is also necessary…’, this dialogue of the film ‘Haq’ is the essence of the movie, there is a scene in the film when Shazia Bano reaches her husband Abbas’s house after getting married, she sees that there are three cookers in the house. On asking, she is told that if one cooker gets damaged in the house, then Abbas brings another one. If the rubber of some cooker is not good and the whistle of some cooker is not good, this is a symbol. The fact that Abbas is also going to keep his wife in the same way in the house.
‘Haq’ is not just a film, it is the voice of all those women and girls who are raising the voice of their rights and have been successful, the film expresses its views clearly and directly without any pretense.
The film starts from a small village in Uttar Pradesh named Sanki, the story is of Shazia Bano who is married to Abbas, she has three children, everything goes well in the beginning but the twist in the story comes when Abbas marries a second time and brings home the new bride. Then there is discord and the matter comes to the point of divorce and from here the real fight of Shazia Bano begins, how the fight between two people reaches from home to locality and then to the courtroom and how Shazia Bano succeeds in her fight, the film talks about this.
The story is inspired by true events – how a divorce case reaches a historic decision by the Supreme Court. The story tells on this in its own way. The biggest thing is that the story also tells that religion and law both say the same thing but people become selective according to convenience.
Yami Gautam’s acting in the film ‘Haq’ is amazing. He has given the best performance of his career so far. His grasp and research on the character of Shazia in the film is clearly visible on screen. Emraan Hashmi has also done an excellent job in the film, apart from this Vartika Singh, Rahul Mitra, Sheeba Chadda, Vijay Vikram Singh, Danish Hussain have all done a good job.
In the climax of the film, Imran’s character presents his argument during the court hearing. After listening to it, one feels what is left to be said but after that, Yami Gautam’s dialogue and the argument of that character, this whole scene is very powerful. This entire scene is very powerful in every respect. By the end, this film shocks you to the core. The special thing is that the character of Abbas has been kept very balanced, he is not a typical villain with gray shades and the same treatment was given to the character of Vartika Singh. Who has played the role of Saira i.e. Abbas’s second wife, hence the film looks beautiful at times, especially when anyone refuses to give any thing to Shazia. Then scenes like Saira’s arrival and placing the vegetable basket at Shazia’s door strengthen the bridge between Sautan’s emotions and humanity in the film and due to these reasons the film becomes classic and beautiful.
The film’s director Suparn Verma has done an extraordinary job this time, the issue is sensitive and demands a lot of maturity, in such a situation, it is amazing to put forward your point firmly and not let any propaganda dominate, the same praise should be given to the film’s writer Reshu Nath, the script and screenplay of the film gives a strong foundation to the film, which strengthens the grip of the film’s issue.
There are many people who may be superficially aware of the Shah Bano case but every minute detail has been explained in detail in the film. When a filmmaker knows the art of storytelling, he does not need sensational tactics, Suparn Verma has proved this.
The film ‘Haq’ adds another name to the list of brilliant courtroom dramas of Bollywood. At the same time, the film also raises many questions very simply, without any unnecessary noise, which are as relevant today as they were in 1985. Films like Haq should be kept in the category of important films, regardless of whether they are good or bad.
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