The Movie Waffler New to VOD - THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS | The Movie Waffler

New to VOD - THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS

New to VOD - THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS
A young Pakistani-Canadian woman travels to Karachi and reconnects with her mother following her father's death.

Review by Benjamin Poole

Directed by: Fawzia Mirza

Starring: Amrit Kaur, Nimra Bucha, Hamza Haq

The Queen of My Dreams poster

The Queen of My Dreams ("In color," to recognise the title's witty appendage) opens upon the recognisable scenario of a dedicated film fan enthusiastically introducing a partner to a movie of considerable importance to them. However, this isn't the overfamiliarity of a filmbro painstakingly explaining Fincher's use of chiaroscuro lighting to a wall-eyed suitor: in writer/director Fawzia Mirza's energetic comedy drama, the film in question is Bollywood classic Aradhana, revered by millennial Azra (Amrit Kaur) to her girlfriend (Charlie Boyle) who duly laughs along with Azra's singing-and-dancing, while questioning the vivid idiosyncrasies of the mode; the dual roles, the "insane" plot, and the "old age make up." Significantly, the cute opening takes place within an apartment of the same colourful pantones featured in the lavish settings of the VHS which the couple watch.

The Queen of My Dreams review

Aside from establishing the winning charm of the film as a whole, the sequence also manages the expectations of its potential audience, as several of the cited cautions could also apply to The Queen of My Dreams, with its storytelling that will homage various tropes of the Bollywood "genre." In further conflation, a cooler voiceover from our heroine has already informed us how she associates her mother (whom she "tried to be like" but couldn't, due to the matriarch's staunch conservatism) with Hindi cinema and in particular its reigning queen, Sharmila Tagore. As a Muslim child in 1980s Canada, the vibrant cinema of Bollywood proposed a culture and history for the pre-teen Azra to lose herself within, a liberation from the social exclusions she experiences and which we see in flashback (the various mocked up covers in the video shop make for good pictorial jokes). Moreover, The Queen of My Dreams is based on Mirza's solo stage show, and the period set film accordingly retains an authentic sense of biography.


Make that period plural, as, following a family tragedy, Azra returns to Pakistan, and the film engages us with a series of '60s-based episodes depicting the developing romance between her parents, wherein Kaur also plays Azra's younger, more playful mum Mariam. An intriguing aspect of The Queen of My Dreams is whether these flashbacks are incidents which actually occurred at some point within the film's diegesis, or if they are presented as Azra's romanticised imaginings. Certainly, the mise-en-scene of these nostalgic sequences is resplendent and suffused with technicolor detail pertaining to Pakistan culture. For example, there is a recurring montage of a meal being prepared in quick, sizzling edits of ghee melting, chillis efficiently chopped; a feast which will become part of familial communication regarding the potentiality of arranged marriages between respective children. Concerning this tradition, conflict occurs when Mariam independently falls in love with Hassan, who is to pursue a study of medicine in Scotland, which is half a world away from Mariam's family...

The Queen of My Dreams review

Mariam's parental dispute is mirrored by Azra's queerness - she has not come out to her parents and refers to Sharon as a "flat-mate." It is still illegal to be homosexual in Pakistan today and homophobia prevails in South Asia: The Queen of My Dreams is set a quarter of a century ago from today. Within this warm-hearted film there is no harrowing depiction of persecution, however, and Mariam's attitudes are presented as being part of a tradition where sexuality of any form is rarely discussed. Beguilingly, Bollywood product itself epitomises a certain strain of camp: an art of the masses, which with its hyperbolic nature of colour, song and performance expresses the "proper mixture of the exaggerated, the fantastic, the passionate, and the naïve": in visual terms, a close cultural equivalent is the pageantry and theatrics of gay cabaret. With the expressive cinema deployed within The Queen of My Dreams as an escapist framework for Azra's dissatisfaction with her adolescent lot there is an interesting suggestion of especial queer appeal.

The Queen of My Dreams review

Perhaps The Queen of My Dreams could have benefitted from additional examination of this cultural context (the film ends just at the precipice of a "coming-out-of-age" denouement) to further compliment the fluid presentation of Mariam and little Azra's immigrant stories, as, being an intelligent, modern and queer Muslim, adult Azra is, after all, the successful, ongoing result of these previous narratives. A highly ambitious movie, at times The Queen of My Dreams doesn't quite leave space to fully explore its propositions. Back to that start, nonetheless: after Azra qualifies what she and Sharon are about to watch, she reassures her that "it's the best." With its big heart and rainbow energy, Azra's judgement is a superlative which could likewise be applied to much of The Queen of My Dreams.

The Queen of My Dreams is on UK/ROI VOD now.



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