THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS – February 13, 7:00PM @ Cinestudio
Queer Thursdays Presents: THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS
A new film from Out Film CT alum Fawzia Mirza (Signature Move)!
Itâs 1999. 22-year-old queer Pakistani grad student Azra (Amrit Kaur) lives in Toronto with her girlfriend and has a strained relationship with her conservative mother Mariam (Nimra Bucha). Mariam and her husband Hassan (Hamza Haq) are traveling to Pakistan to visit family, and on the trip, Hassan has a sudden heart attack and dies.
Azra immediately flies to Karachi for the burial. She is impacted by the sounds and smells of a city that are so distant and yet so familiar, her land, her motherâs land. This flashes her back to her motherâs youthâ1969 Karachi, in its âGolden Age.â Here, a 22-year-old Young Mariam (also played by Kaur) is in conflict with her own mother, Amira, who insists Mariam must marry a man who will stay and live in Pakistan. Despite this, Mariam and Hassanâs Bollywood love story unfolds. When itâs revealed Hassan has accepted a job in Canada, Mariamâs mother is furious, but itâs too late to stop their plan to leave.
THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS is a dramedy spanning 30 years in the life of a Pakistani-Canadian family, exploring intergenerational connections between mothers and daughters, East and West, and home and away. Infused with humor, romance, music, and Bollywood fantasy, and inspired by personal experiences, family stories, and intertwined with Pakistani history and collective memory, the film shows the expansive journey of women seeking to define and decide their own paths, while simultaneously learningâand rememberingâhow to love.
Director Fawzia Mirza | 2023 | Canada, Pakistan | 96 minutes | in English and Urdu
Cast: Amrit Kaur, Nimra Bucha, Hamza Haq, Ayana Manji, Gul-e-Rana, Ali A. Kazmi, Meher Jaffri
âA vibrant, heartfelt love letter to mothers and daughtersâ â Tania Hussein, Collider
âThe film remains pleasing across its different decades and drawn similarities, its emotional story emboldened by the color palette of a shelf full of saris.â â Nick Allen, RogerEbert.comÂ