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Grudgingly write a review of a newly-opened bakery in the city. Hastily check your email to find that you’ve been rejected by the writing fellowship you’d pinned your award-winning-reportage hopes on. Pray to the Gods of Journalism that you can beat deadlines (and the deadly traffic) to reach home in time to have a semblance of a social life.
Only to be informed by your boss at the last minute that you must stay late to edit copies.
That’s the daily life of Ayesha Khan, a reporter with a Pakistani daily in Karachi, in Saba Imtiaz’s Karachi, You’re Killing Me! But it just as easily could have been an excerpt from my journal about working in a newsroom in Delhi, or a regular Monday of any reporter in South Asia.
Karachi is the strongest character in the book in an otherwise predictable storyline — overwhelming the characters with its bombs, alcohol prohibitions, complexity, power cuts and chaos. Always contrasted with its more orderly cousin, Islamabad, Karachi with its “Factory Boys”, wine-swirling cynical men, literature fests and consistent mugging is a character one can’t help falling in love with. In Imtiaz’s Karachi, a bootlegger is a lifeline, muggings are normal, old poets debate their contribution to Faiz, innumerable books are written about a post-9/11 Afghanistan, and roadblocks are as omnipresent as the power cuts.
The city is described lovingly, and with a refreshing honesty that might shatter stereotypes held about life of a young Pakistani for those of us who peek at the country only through a lens tinted by newsprint.
Every character in the film has a different outlook towards the city. Ayesha shares a love-hate relationship with the city, often proclaiming that she “hates” the city. She longs for a life outside Karachi, feeling suffocated – by the lack of opportunities, and sometimes literally, thanks to the dreadful heat.
But navigating the by-lanes of Karachi, reporting doggedly on gang lords and fashion shows, she seems to thrive in the chaos. She is what editors will call a ‘city veteran’, and in the end it is her knowledge of Karachi that becomes her calling card in journalism.
Ayesha’s frustration with her career and life is relatable.
Imtiaz deals with the heartbreak and hope of a being an independent, working woman striving to achieve success with humour and plenty of Murree beer. In a breezy and honest narrative, the Saad-Ayesha dynamic strikes something of a false chord. Saad is Ayesha’s best friend and a successful professional in Dubai, but his character is never fully fleshed out – with the hasty dynamic leading to a somewhat dissatisfying ending.
Final verdict? If you’re stuck in a quarter-life crisis with a job going nowhere, a dwindling social life and in need of a dose of witty humour, read Karachi, You’re Killing Me! to discover a universal truth:
Journalists have it worse.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)