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What Will People Say(Hva vil folk si)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Norway, Germany, Sweden · 2017
1h 46m
Director Iram Haq
Starring Maria Mozhdah, Adil Hussain, Ekavali Khanna, Rohit Saraf
Genre Drama

Sixteen-year-old Nisha lives a double life. At home with her family, she is the perfect Pakistani daughter. When out with her friends, she is a normal Norwegian teenager. When her father catches her in bed with her boyfriend, Nisha's two worlds brutally collide.

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58

The A.V. Club by A.A. Dowd

he performances are strong, and the situation itself presumably carries a harrowing veracity, but an ordeal is about all the movie offers. Shaking your head over and over again is the only suitable reaction.

80

Variety by Alissa Simon

"People” represents a big step up from Haq’s more modestly scaled debut, but it’s a move she handles with assurance and aplomb. She develops the father-daughter relationship visually as well as verbally, showing the action from both their perspectives.

70

Screen International by Allan Hunter

No matter how melodramatic the story becomes, and how much the emotions boil, What Will People Say at least tries to understand both sides of this cultural and generational divide.

50

The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij

This is the second feature from Pakistani-Norwegian filmmaker Iram Haq, but unfortunately it lacks the nuance and insight of her impressively poignant yet controlled debut feature, I Am Yours.

63

Slant Magazine by Derek Smith

The film flirts with miserablism, but it counterbalances the direness of its main character's situation with moments of levity.

75

The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak

It’s about hypocrisy, mistrust, and the struggle felt by second-generation immigrants everywhere. And Haq pulls no punches in depicting just how devastatingly bad things can get when a child’s mind is torn between a community built on archaic ideals and another entrenched in a present where such stringent rules prove impossible to uphold.

100

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Kate Taylor

Mozhdah empathetically charts Nisha’s despairing acquiescence and fitful rebellions, but it’s Adil Hussain’s work making her father not entirely unsympathetic that really stands out.

58

The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo

Mozhdah, appearing in her first film, can’t match the astonishing, bone-deep understanding of psychic masochism and involuntary complicity that Nicole Kidman brought to her similarly fraught therapy sessions in "Big Little Lies" — this film isn’t operating on that rarefied level in any respect, frankly — but she does manage, in this quietly harrowing scene, to make Nisha more than just a helpless victim.

80

The New York Times by Teo Bugbee

In a resolute acknowledgment of the oppression that too many young women face at home, the film portrays the family structure as the enforcing unit of feminine docility. Here, love is another form of bondage.

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