THE ICON INTERVIEW: FLYING HIGH
I’m scheduled to meet with the star of the recently-released Pakistan Air Force (PAF) feature Sherdil, Mikaal Zulfiqar, after a customary pre-release press conference in Islamabad. It’s difficult to spot Mikaal at first, surrounded as he is by cameras, the press and fans, something the capital isn’t very familiar with, to say the least. The hustle bustle is usual, but rarely does the city, in its quintessential inclement weather, warm up to a film this ecstatically. Sherdil has managed to catch eyeballs and for reasons that the film itself might not be responsible for.
The PR team for the film escorts Mikaal out of the mob that he’s — for want of a better expression — trapped amidst for about an hour now, no less. I patiently wait as he continuously obliges requests for selfies and answers the same questions over and over, of what truly makes his latest offering worthy of being watched.
Mikaal’s a bit frazzled, to say the least, by the time we sit down to talk, for promotions are tedious, but he’s equally pleased with the surprising turnout. Sherdil might just do wonders at the box office, but it has more to do with its subject than its cast, crew, treatment etc.
Mikaal Zulfiqar hopes that playing the lead in the recently released Sherdil will finally put his career on the right trajectory after the misadventures and bad choices of the past
The film, whose release is purely coincidental with the ongoing political circumstances between India and Pakistan, narrates the ‘fictional’ story of Indian fighter jets infiltrating into Pakistani airspace. Owing to social media and the exaggerated news flashes, you’d be living under a rock if this is the first time you’re reading of Indian Wing Commander Abhinandan or the almost-war that took place last month. The film, though privately helmed by Azfar Jafri — best known for Janaan and Parchi — and under the debutant banner of Noman Khan’s NK Productions, has been officially commissioned by the PAF, and supported logistically throughout. One wonders, however, if a film with such a nationalistic peg might further propagate conflict.