Wednesday, 12 August 2015

Movie Review: Moor – A Brilliant Gift to Pakistan, Its Cinema and Railways

moor movie review
Bollywood movies have been doing good business in Pakistan for a long time. Some of them have even crossed Rs 25 crores land mark on box office, which not a single Pakistani movie has touched at home yet. The success formula seems quite simple, cast big names of your industry, choose an emotional subject or add some masala, and before you decide to release your film, release an item number to create some hype. For a practical, may be, a few of the recently released Pakistani movies have successfully tried this formula but Jami’s directorial debut movie Moor has totally refused it and rather touched an unpopular subject with a mixture of mostly new cast along with some forgotten faces. The fate of the Moor will be decided on this Independence Day but thumbs up to whole team and particularly to Jami for bringing our attention towards a forgotten issue and showing some extremely breathtaking visuals from Baluchistan.
Moor, a movie directed, produced and written by Jamshed Mahmood Raza aka Jami, is a drama based on the story of Railway system of Balochistan, particularly of Zhob district back in 1984. Actor Hameed Sheikh asWahid and Shaz Khan as Ehsaan play the lead characters. The rest of the cast includes Samiya Mumtaz asPalwasha, Ayaz Samoo as Imtisal, Abdul Qadir as Baggoo Baba, Soniya Hussain as Amber, Shabbir Rana as Zahirand Sultan Hussain as Lalu. Jami, the director himself, and Eshita Mehboob Syed play cameo roles in the movie.
shaz khan samiya mumtaz and hameed sheikh in moor movie
Moor[pronounced: More, meaning Mother] is the story of Wahid, who is a railway station master at a small town in Balochistan, and his son Ehsaan who has shifted in a metropolitan city, Karachi . It is a little complicated in first half, which might drop the interest of viewers, specifically the ones who are into Masala movies. Things are happening at different time periods, at different places, at same pace and are all linked up with one family. It takes time, almost half, to realize from where it starts and where it is going.

Unexpectedly, the second half of the movie grasps the interest of viewers with same force as it drops in first half. Everything gets cleared and become interesting. So, if you think of leaving cinema at any point before the interval, give a shut up call to your brain, wait and enjoy the catchy songs and never seen before breathtaking visuals of Balochistan.
The acting of all the actors is remarkable and you don’t feel anywhere as they are trying hard to get into their respective roles. Industry Veteran Hameed Sheikh is truly a gem who makes powerful appearance through out the movie. New comer Shaz Khan who plays the role of Ehsaan also impresses with his acting skills. He is certainly going to places after his fabulous debut. As for supporting roles, Samiya Mumtaz and Ayaz Samoo do justice with their roles but one guy who stole the show is Abdul Qadir who plays the role of Baggoo Baba. The character of Baggoo is amazingly placed and it makes you smile whenever you start feeling bore or think the movie is being dragged. Indeed, Baggoo’s light comedy and epic soundtrack save the movie.

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