Written by: Hurmat Majid
Posted on: August 05, 2025 |
| 中文
Sajal Aly and Hamayun Saeed in Main Manto Nahi Hoon
The first four episodes of Main Manto Nahi Hoon make one thing absolutely clear: this is a drama produced with grand ambition, lavish aesthetics and a reverence for cinema-like storytelling. With a star-studded cast, thoughtful direction and a production quality leagues ahead of most primetime television, it enters the ring ready to dominate. But here’s the irony, while it looks like a winner, it constantly struggles under the weight of the one thing meant to elevate it: its script.
Penned by Khalil-ur-Rehman Qamar, the drama opens in a fashion that immediately signals its gravitas. Two aging patriarchs, Siraj (Asif Raza Mir) and Bin Yameen (Babar Ali), walk the streets in long, slow, meaningful strides, discussing their families’ generations-old blood feud. Their journey leads them to the home of Miyan Sahab (Salman Shahid), who has summoned them in the hopes of orchestrating peace. The meeting ends, unsurprisingly, in a stalemate - a poetic, if heavy-handed, metaphor for the drama’s core dilemma: people trapped in a legacy of violence and pride.
Amid this heavy setup, we are introduced to Suraiyya (Saima Noor), Siraj’s widowed sister who has lost two sons to this unrelenting enmity. It’s an emotionally potent character brought to life with incredible poise and restrained heartbreak by Saima. In another household, we meet Mehmal (Sajal Aly), Siraj’s daughter and Naseeba (Saba Faisal), her quietly suffering mother. Mehmal wants to study further, to go beyond the walls of domestic life. Her father hesitates, not out of cartoonish patriarchy but a more insidious fear: that ambition only leads to loss. Eventually, and with some reluctance, he relents.
Here, we see a glimpse of the kind of drama Main Manto Nahi Hoon could be: a story of young people trying to breathe in spaces haunted by grief and gripped by outdated codes of honor. Mehmal’s brothers represent that suffocation, one crippled by gunshots and the other behind bars. By contrast, Bin Yameen’s sons roam freely, basking in the power they inherited but did not earn.
It is in this generational contrast that the story begins to flirt with something deeper. Yet just as the themes emerge, they are muddied by the very thing that has plagued Khalil-ur-Rehman Qamar’s recent work: his inability to let characters speak without using them as mouthpieces for his personal ideologies. Where the direction (by Nadeem Baig) wants to speak with nuance and stillness, the writing crashes in with sweeping monologues, archaic expressions and outdated gendered dynamics that feel more theatrical than truthful.
The drama’s titular figure, Manto (played by Humayun Saeed), is not the Manto, but a professor of economics with a sardonic streak and a quiet sense of rebellion. His presence is a welcome surprise, and this is the first time in a long while Humayun isn’t playing a savior-hero but a layered, morally ambiguous academic. There’s a scene where Mehmal, his student, looks at him with a hint of fascination: a crush perhaps, or simply the gaze of a girl starved for ideas bigger than family loyalty and revenge. It's subtle, never indulgent, and it works.
Miss Maria (Sanam Saeed), a university professor, brings a refreshing dimension to the narrative. Modern, composed and emotionally astute, she serves as a calm and graceful counterpoint to the surrounding chaos. Her character, and Sanam’s nuanced portrayal, remains one of the most grounded and balanced elements of the show, avoiding both overacting and getting overshadowed by the script’s dramatic flair.
We also see Bin Yameen’s younger daughter, Mehmal, at a university function in a scene laced with romantic tension: refreshingly free of the usual toxic tropes, at least for now. His father’s warning, however, serves as a reminder that the past still casts a long shadow over the present, especially when it comes to love and marriage.
For all its beauty - and make no mistake, the drama is visually stunning - Main Manto Nahi Hoon is burdened by its own desire to sound intellectual, poetic and provocative all at once. The dialogues, instead of feeling rooted in character, often feel like they are meant to go viral as quotes. They’re rich in metaphor but poor in momentum. You find yourself pausing, not because the line hits you in the gut, but because it’s trying so hard to.
And this is where the problem begins.
Khalil-ur-Rehman Qamar has long been a controversial figure, known for espousing problematic views on women, gender roles and modernity, views that have seeped into his recent scripts in increasingly obvious and grating ways. In Main Manto Nahi Hoon, while the surface-level characters are progressive, a girl who wants to study, a professor who is not a macho-man, a widowed woman with dignity, they are often put in situations or made to speak in ways that reinforce the very stereotypes they’re supposedly escaping.
There are entire scenes that serve no purpose other than to echo the writer’s long-standing opinions on what makes a “good” woman or a “real” man. These scenes could have, and should have, been edited out, especially when they add nothing to the story. But the actors rise above the script. The mise en scene, from costumes to lighting, is so carefully curated, so cinematic, that you almost forget how contrived some of the conversations are. Almost!
Saima Noor delivers a career-best performance with the gravitas of a woman who has endured grief without becoming a shadow. Asif Raza Mir and Babar Ali prove why they remain some of the finest actors in Pakistani television: their silences speak louder than any line they are given. Sajal Aly, dreamy as ever, brings a softness and quiet determination to Mehmal that feels entirely believable. And Sanam Saeed, with her measured performance, balances the emotion-heavy tone with intelligence and charm.
But it is Humayun Saeed who surprises the most, playing a character that is neither idealized nor emasculated. His Manto is eccentric, witty, observant and blessedly, not a hero. Just a man, for once.
So where does that leave Main Manto Nahi Hoon?
If it succeeds, it will be because of its cast, its direction and its aesthetic intelligence. If it fails, and it just might, it will be because the writer refused to let the story breathe. Because he couldn’t resist inserting himself into every conversation. Because he tried to make a television drama into a podium.
There is still time to course-correct. The plot is compelling enough, the characters rich enough, and the stakes high enough to justify continued viewing. But the question remains: can the story outgrow its writer?
One hopes so, because everything else is working!
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