• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
Friday, February 27, 2026
Dubai News TV
  • UAE
    • Abu Dhabi
    • Dubai
    • Ajman
  • REGION
    • Middle East
    • GCC
    • MENA
      • Syria
    • Asia
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Iran
      • Israel
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • Africa
    • Europe
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Opinion
    • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
    • EXCLUSIVE
  • World
  • Business
    • Local Business
    • Markets
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • Horoscope
  • PR
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • UAE
    • Abu Dhabi
    • Dubai
    • Ajman
  • REGION
    • Middle East
    • GCC
    • MENA
      • Syria
    • Asia
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Iran
      • Israel
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • Africa
    • Europe
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Opinion
    • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
    • EXCLUSIVE
  • World
  • Business
    • Local Business
    • Markets
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • Horoscope
  • PR
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Dubai News
No Result
View All Result
  • Top News
  • UAE
  • Dubai
  • World
  • Business
  • GOLD/FOREX
  • REGION
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FEATURED
  • EDITOR’S CHOICE
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • Road To Financial Freedom
  • Health
  • Sports

‘Roshan Raahein’ review: Sarmad Khoosat’s telefilm trades reflection for naive optimism

by News Desk
2 years ago
in Entertainment, Lifestyle, Top News
‘Roshan Raahein’ review: Sarmad Khoosat’s telefilm trades reflection for naive optimism
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

When concrete first found the unpaved roads of my small neighbourhood in Multan, there was a palpable shift in the air. A paved road was first a promise, later a prerequisite of development. I was only twelve then but even I could feel the joy of all men pricking my eyes. It was the children who had to be pulled off first when the project began while the men courted the prospect of better prospects.

Years later, I presume, the young boys of that street grew up and became men, the next generation to feel inconvenienced by roads unlit, their remaking often stretching to months (sometimes longer). As I watched Sarmad Khoosat’s latest offering, Maryam Mehmood resurrected for me a sense of discovering the same, familiar loss of mobility and future.

A broken road, a darkened road might inconvenience men but it incapacitates others. Inconvenience is bad but I venture not many men lose sleep over all the ways a night could go wrong in the dark – unlike Maryam and many women.

What about women?

Marking his return to telefilms, Khoosat’s Roshan Raahein follows Maryam, played by the brilliant Rasti Farooq, a young working woman who gets off the bus one day after work only to find her usual road to home torn up and under construction. Hannah (Aleeza Fatima), a bright college student who takes the bus with Maryam, introduces her to another route through the field with no streetlights. Roshan Raahein seizes the all-too-common sight of a plaintive dug-out road after nightfall to ask: what about women?

The Kamli director is joined by Nirmal Bano who also penned the story for his 2019 offering Zindagi Tamasha. To his credit, Khoosat’s protagonist is grounded in reality. A pharmacist by profession, Maryam is patient and hopeful to unite with her Sharjah-based husband, Uzair, yet never just waiting. In the opening scene, she dutifully searches the cricket stadium on her mobile phone, as he guides her to himself over a phone call from the match. At work, she relents to her boss’ constraints (Khoosat) and her male coworker’s wisdom. While trying to lodge a request for streetlights, her unblinking stare turns more acidic with every visit as if daring men to dismiss her.

Yet dismissed she is and repeatedly so. Rasti emerges a natural in portraying an ordinary woman who picks her battles as need be – neither pliant nor defiant. However, for those expecting a tale of sisterhood or community organising, Roshan Raahein shoves change in the backseat of one rousing speech. Sania Saeed’s character as Maryam’s mother, a single parent and a housewife, is frankly wasted on the sidelines; she struggles to understand the crisis affecting her daughter for the most part, her face twisted in a look of puzzling concern. Then again, what hope could streetlights lend to someone already immobile?

Writing on the wall

Khoosat’s latest has two villains, patriarchy and ineffective bureaucracy, captured with his usual flair, the worst always implied, never indulged. And yet again, consistent with his past directorial ventures, he remains apprehensive to trust his audience. Whatever is left unsaid is followed by an impulsive explanation. The first half of the film attempts to layer an intuitive symbolism, relaying Maryam’s recognition of the city as a man’s world. The city’s walls advertise a men’s fragrance: ‘Alfa Scent,’ sporting a close-up of a model, his eyes a deeper red than the perfume, an unblinking stare. If this wasn’t already too on the nose, posters of a shirtless, ripped man invite people to a bodybuilding competition.

Similar to this ‘wall of masculinity,’ Khoosat erects a ‘wall of irony’ in the councillor’s office when Maryam goes to request streetlights. Once again, the camera coincides with her gaze, fixing on campaign posters for councillor Asif Cheema of Roshan Pakistan Tehreek, for a union council in Suraj Block, whose electoral symbol is sunglasses.

A small world

There is a better metaphor here at play that’s lost to the film’s premature hope, of development’s many promises and all that becomes collateral in this ambition. When Maryam brings up the dugout, the councillor rhetorically asks, “So, for whom is all this happening?” In the bureaucratic humdrum, it’s easier to tell Maryam to sit at home until the repairs are done than to install streetlights.

Her husband and the men in the neighbourhood agree. Indeed, what reason could draw a woman out of the confines of her home in the dark? The ignorance is genuine, born out of disregard, not malice – that one leads to the other could’ve been one diagnosis. But the telefilm trades reflection for naive optimism.

The protagonist becomes a heroine, the patriarchs are shamed and the living room turns into a theatrical recall of early Pakistani social film that tells instead of showing. In its 45-minute runtime, Maryam walks the road thrice with a crawling unease that never turns violent. But much of this rising tension is steadily lost to scenes at the government offices, their administrative tedium infecting the whole pace.

All that could have been forgiven if the final act had not rammed the premise into a happy ending. As the telefilm endured its climax, I turned not to my childhood but towards the broken road behind my neighbourhood’s block – a similar scene of dirt, concrete and the citizenry’s taxes lazily funnelled out. Despite its ambitious premise, Khoosat succumbs to telling a hero’s story rather than a people’s. Is there even writing on the wall to decipher? An allegory to unpack? It appears that streetlights mean little beyond themselves in the small world of Roshan Raahein.

Share21Tweet13Send

Related Posts

UAE ‘Strongly Condemns’ Deadly Terrorist Attacks on Police in Pakistan
Top News

UAE ‘Strongly Condemns’ Deadly Terrorist Attacks on Police in Pakistan

February 26, 2026
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and EU Nations Condemn Israel’s West Bank Settlement Expansion
Top News

Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and EU Nations Condemn Israel’s West Bank Settlement Expansion

February 26, 2026
Ramadan 2026: Expert Tips to Beat Nicotine and Caffeine Cravings as Withdrawal Eases
Entertainment

Ramadan 2026: Expert Tips to Beat Nicotine and Caffeine Cravings as Withdrawal Eases

February 26, 2026
Gold and Silver Prices Dip Slightly as Geopolitical Jitters Cap Losses
Business

Gold and Silver Prices Dip Slightly as Geopolitical Jitters Cap Losses

February 26, 2026
Trump Claims Iran Seeking ICBMs Capable of Hitting US, Expresses Preference for Diplomacy
Top News

Trump Claims Iran Seeking ICBMs Capable of Hitting US, Expresses Preference for Diplomacy

February 25, 2026
Humbert Ousts Defending Champion Tsitsipas in Dubai First-Round Blockbuster
Sports

Humbert Ousts Defending Champion Tsitsipas in Dubai First-Round Blockbuster

February 25, 2026
Load More
  • Lebanon President Condemns ‘Blatant Aggression’ After Israeli Strikes Kill 12, Threatening Fragile Ceasefire

    Lebanon President Condemns ‘Blatant Aggression’ After Israeli Strikes Kill 12, Threatening Fragile Ceasefire

    55 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Rubio to Brief Netanyahu on US-Iran Talks Amid Military Build-Up in Region

    56 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • 50,000 Palestinians Defy Restrictions to Pray at Al-Aqsa Mosque on First Ramadan Night

    55 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • ‘I’m on the Right Path’: Eala Wins Hearts in Dubai Despite Gauff Quarterfinal Loss

    55 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Managing personal liquidity in 7 easy steps

    323 shares
    Share 129 Tweet 81
  • Pakistan Air Strikes in Afghanistan Kill Dozens, Including Children, Escalating Border Tensions

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • ‘Law Must Take Its Course’: King Charles’ Brother Andrew Arrested in Epstein Document Leak Scandal

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • South Africa Announce Themselves as T20 World Cup Favourites with Dominant 76-Run Demolition of India

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Dubai Office Market Hits 11-Year High with Dh13.1 Billion in Sales

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Gold Jewellery in UAE vs India: Where Should NRIs Buy? A Cost Comparison

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
United Arab Emirates Dirham Exchange Rate

About Dubai News TV

Dubai News is an English language news and current affairs digital TV channel established to provide round-the-clock news, information, and knowledge about local, regional, and international events. It covers a wide range of topics, including politics, business, technology, culture, and sports, ensuring viewers stay informed and engaged with the latest developments. The channel aims to deliver accurate, unbiased reporting and insightful analysis, catering to a diverse audience with a global perspective.

Categories

  • Abu Dhabi (43)
  • Afghanistan (32)
  • Africa (29)
  • Ajman (5)
  • Artificial Intelligence (4)
  • Asia (82)
  • Bangladesh (87)
  • Business and Economy (751)
  • Cricket (11)
  • Donald Trump (6)
  • Dubai (157)
  • EDITOR'S CHOICE (10)
  • Education (26)
  • Entertainment (1,933)
  • ENVIRONMENT (13)
  • Europe (91)
  • EXCLUSIVE (4)
  • FEATURED (40)
  • Featured Stories (38)
  • Global Business (2,239)
  • Gold & Forex (1)
  • Healthcare (9)
  • heath (10)
  • Horoscope (618)
  • Hospitality (1)
  • India (176)
  • International (8,571)
  • Iran (19)
  • Israel (16)
  • Israel-Palestine conflict (76)
  • Life Style (1)
  • Lifestyle (1,372)
    • Health (8)
  • Local Business (1,614)
  • Markets (11)
  • MENA (817)
  • Military & Defense (8)
  • News (11,373)
    • Business (2,145)
    • Politics (12)
    • World (8,613)
      • Games (2)
      • Travel (6)
  • Opinion (25)
  • Outreach Initiatives (1)
  • Pakistan (286)
  • Personal Finance (7)
  • Philippine (11)
  • Philippines (7)
  • PR (157)
  • REAL ESTATE (169)
  • REGION (4,213)
    • GCC (206)
    • Middle East (3,283)
  • Road To Financial Freedom (7)
  • Russia (28)
  • Russia-Ukraine war (73)
  • Saudi Arabia (15)
  • Sharjah (12)
  • South Asia (91)
  • Sports (1,213)
  • Sri Lanka (45)
  • Startup (7)
  • Syria (7)
  • Tech (497)
  • Technology (488)
  • The Big Read (6)
  • Top News (24,640)
  • turkey (9)
  • TV Shows (7)
  • UAE (6,837)
  • Uncategorized (10)
  • Video Posts (11)
  • Viewpoint (8)

Latest News

Your daily horoscope: February 26, 2026
Horoscope

Your daily horoscope: February 26, 2026

by Web Desk
February 26, 2026
0

IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAYWhat matters most this year is that your ambitions are designed not just to enrich yourself...

Read moreDetails
UAE ‘Strongly Condemns’ Deadly Terrorist Attacks on Police in Pakistan

UAE ‘Strongly Condemns’ Deadly Terrorist Attacks on Police in Pakistan

February 26, 2026
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and EU Nations Condemn Israel’s West Bank Settlement Expansion

Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and EU Nations Condemn Israel’s West Bank Settlement Expansion

February 26, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2024 Dubai News TV - Powerd by Global Biz International.

No Result
View All Result
  • Top News
  • UAE
  • Dubai
  • World
  • Business
  • GOLD/FOREX
  • REGION
    • South Asia
      • Pakistan
      • India
    • GCC
    • Middle East
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FEATURED
    • Featured Stories
  • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • Road To Financial Freedom
  • Health
  • Sports

© 2024 Dubai News TV - Powerd by Global Biz International.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.