Hala awed by cliched trappings of a cultural diaspora

Subhash K Jha reviews the film Hala and describes it as a rather disappointing affair. Read it here.

Hala awed by cliched trappings of a cultural diaspora 1

Hala (An original film by Apple)

Starring Geraldine Vishwanathan, Purbi Joshi, Azad Khan

Written & Directed by Minhal Baig

Rating: ** (2 stars)

When we first see the 17-year old Hala she is in the bath-tub pleasuring herself.  It isn’t the right image to introduce us to her. Hala is sexually curious, yes. But she is no libidinous adventuress. But a calm curious poetess on cruising the world on a ski-board whose eyes conveys the suffering of a soul far older and worldweary than she.

Somehow, the well-meaning but clichéd representation in Hala of a young Pakistani-American girl’s experiences never go beyond the tropes and the signposts. Conservative Pakistani parents, welcoming though culturally curious friends in school, liberal Caucasian friends in school  …didn’t we see all of that in Gurinder Chadha’s Blinded  ByThe light recently?

Hala does it with a far less blitheness of the spirit. It is a film weighed down by its own self-importance. In trying to sublimate the ‘message’ to a larger audience-acceptance of teen-angst writer-director Mihnaz Baig ends up doing the opposite of what she presumably intended.

Hala is a heavy-handed Paki-girl-coming-of-age story where the girl’s only problem , eventually is her  father, a bigoted Pakistani man who, as it turns out, is  having a secret extra-marital affair with an American colleague(luckily for  the script, a female colleague).

The wife, played nicely by comedienne Purbi Joshi, reacts to the affair when her daughter discloses it, with a I-knew-it-all-along. Then the mom comes up with the big reveal. “I named you Hala. He’s lying about naming you. He wanted to name you Joy,” she reveals in Urdu.

Strange, the mother after so many years in America can’t speak a word of English. Father is conveniently dumped out of the mother-daughter secret society and life moves on smelling of freshly plucked roses.

Any American émigré, specially from an over-conservative society, would tell you, diasporic crises are not easily solvable, and cultural assimilation is a myth. And yet in Hala, our Pakistani-American heroine’s dilemma of being courted by an American boyfriend is reduced to a one-note crossword puzzle. The way Hala treats the love interest is downright distressing. Making it worse, some of her decisions thereafter are downright embarrassing in their inappropriateness.This girl isn’t in need of freedom. She needs a shrink.

By the time Hala threw off her hijab and walked into free air and sunshine (yes, there is a sequence where this happens literally) I was neither intrigued nor  amused by Hala’s journey from domestic repression to academic freedom. I was simply bored.

Not a hint of racism anywhere in Hala’s life in America.Where in America is this film located?  Disney’s Neverland?  And though the troubled stormy but eventually empathetic mother-daughter relationship  is clearly inspired  by  Laurie Metcalfe and Soirse Ronan in Lady Bird, Hala conveys none of the other film’s airy  treatment of  the troubled  relationship.

More Lady Bored than Lady Bird, Hala is a disappointment. If you really want to see a film about a Pakistani-Asian girl’s attempts to overcome her cultural crisis in the Western hemisphere watch Iram Haq’s What Will People Say. That’s the film.