Directed by Suparn S. Varma, Haq is a poignant courtroom drama inspired by the landmark 1985 Shah Bano case, where a Muslim woman fought for maintenance rights after her husband’s triple talaq.
Starring Yami Gautam as the resilient Shazia Bano and Emraan Hashmi as her estranged lawyer husband, Abbas Khan, the film trades bombast for quiet intensity.
It’s a mature exploration of personal dignity amid religious and legal tensions—flawed in pacing but elevated by stellar performances.
Haq follows Shazia (Gautam), a devoted wife and mother, whose world unravels when Abbas (Hashmi) remarries and abandons her financially.
What begins as an intimate family fracture spirals into a national firestorm, pitting personal rights against societal norms, faith, and the law.
The screenplay by Reshu Nath avoids clichés, focusing on Shazia’s emotional arc from silent endurance to fierce advocacy while drawing real parallels to Shah Bano’s Supreme Court battle.
Yami Gautam delivers her career-best turn, channeling Shazia’s quiet rage and vulnerability with raw authenticity—think a more subdued Article 370 but even more internalized.
Emraan Hashmi, in a rare dramatic pivot, brings nuance to Abbas, making him sympathetic yet flawed, far from his rom-com roots. Supporting cast like Sheeba Chaddha shines in understated roles.
The film’s restraint in handling sensitive themes like triple talaq and women’s rights earns praise for its “unflinching honesty” and “powerful subtlety.”
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Watched #Haq at the special screening last evening.
It’s not just a film, it’s a mirror to our society — raising tough, necessary questions about justice, equality and faith. @yamigautam is absolutely phenomenal as Shazia Bano — powerful yet vulnerable, she breathes life into a… pic.twitter.com/4yS3RqwlFd— Navika Kumar (@navikakumar) November 5, 2025
It sparks timely reflection on faith vs. justice, without preachiness. Early buzz calls it “2025’s most hard-hitting drama” for reviving a “movement” through honest words.
#Haq Review: FEARLESS
Ratings: ⭐⭐⭐⭐Haq is not just a film….but a powerful courtroom drama that shakes your faith in the system and makes you question WHY?..even today!! different laws exist for different communities!!
Even as one nation, people still struggle against… pic.twitter.com/8oEp7AeP60
— Ravi Gupta (@FilmiHindustani) November 5, 2025
The deliberate slow burn works for character depth but drags in the first act, potentially testing impatient viewers.
Some call it “underwhelming” as a full courtroom saga, feeling more like an emotional chamber piece.
While inspired by real events, a legal notice from Shah Bano’s family over “unauthorized depiction” adds meta-drama that could’ve been woven in for a sharper edge, but it stays surface-level.
Critics are largely on board, hailing it as “potent and hard-hitting” with “commanding performances.
On X, early reactions echo this—fans praise it as “strong, emotional & dignified,” though some note it “could have been the best of 2025” without the slowdown.
My brother and friend of 25 years @Suparn has finally come into his own. Go watch his #Haq and decide. To make a responsible and restrained film in times of propaganda and Islamophobia with a story that could easily slip into that mode is a big win of intent and effort. The film…
— Hansal Mehta (@mehtahansal) November 5, 2025
Haq isn’t flawless, but it is essential viewing, especially in a year of flashy blockbusters. If you loved Piku or Dangal for their heart, this one’s for you; skip if you’re craving high-octane action.





























