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Film Data
The Queen Of My Dreams  2023
Me, My Mom & Sharmila
Director:  Fawzia Mirza
Producer:
  Jason Levangie, Marc Tetreault and Andria Wilson Mirza
Art Director:
  Cyrus Karanjia, Arshad Khan and Imran Maeem
Editor:
  Simone Smith
Music:
  Alysha Brilla
Screenplay:
  Fawzia Mirza
Director of Photography:
  Matt Irwin
slideshow
Cast:
spacer1 Amrit Kaur
spacer1 Nimra Bucha
spacer1 Hamza Haq
spacer1 Charlie Boyle
spacer1 Josh MacDonald
spacer1 Bakhtawar Mazhar
spacer1 Emerson MacNeil
spacer1 Meher Jaffri
spacer1 Trina Corkum
spacer1 Adnan Haffar
spacer1 Ayana Manji
spacer1 Zara Usman
spacer1 Amrit Kaur spacer1 Nimra Bucha spacer1 Hamza Haq
spacer1 Charlie Boyle spacer1 Josh MacDonald spacer1 Bakhtawar Mazhar
spacer1 Emerson MacNeil spacer1 Meher Jaffri spacer1 Trina Corkum
spacer1 Adnan Haffar spacer1 Ayana Manji spacer1 Zara Usman
spacer1 Amrit Kaur spacer1 Nimra Bucha
spacer1 Hamza Haq spacer1 Charlie Boyle
spacer1 Josh MacDonald spacer1 Bakhtawar Mazhar
spacer1 Emerson MacNeil spacer1 Meher Jaffri
spacer1 Trina Corkum spacer1 Adnan Haffar
spacer1 Ayana Manji spacer1 Zara Usman

Synopsis:
In 1999, the sudden death of her father Hassan (Hamza Haq) sends queer Muslim grad student Azra (Amrit Kaur) flying back to her ancestral home in Pakistan, where her stern mother Mariam (Nimra Bucha) demands she play the role of the perfect grieving daughter. But through flashbacks to Mariam's own life in Karachi 30 years before, we see the connections uniting mother and daughter, starting with their shared love of the Bollywood star Sharmila Tagore.
Review:
Fawzia Mirza's bright, energetic first feature, which grew out of their 2012 short film of the same name, explores the chasm between individual desires and cultural expectations, fluidly slipping between the textures of Indian cinema and the concerns of a Canadian coming-of-age picture. Mirza builds a convincing sense of time and place, showcasing a great dual performance from Kaur (The Sex Lives of College Girls) as both Azra and the younger Mariam and allowing a charismatic supporting turn from Haq (Transplant) as both versions of Hassan. As the older Mariam, veteran actor Bucha, whom you may recognise from Ms. Marvel, harmonises with Kaur, showing us hints of the woman Mariam used to be within the person she’s become.

Sort Of cinematographer Matt Irwin gives the 1969 sequences the vivid primary colours and lighting of the era's Bollywood movies while keeping the 1999 material more subdued and naturalistic, and editor Simone Smith ( I Like Movies, 2022) shuffles us confidently between the two time frames. Azra might feel lost, but this movie knows exactly where it’s going.

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