In the film, Yami Gautam Dhar plays Shazia Bano, the fictionalised Shah Bano figure, and her performance is the spine of Haq. She plays Shazia not as a symbol, but as a woman who has lived, loved, hurt, doubted, questioned, and yet stands to fight. There is restraint here, but also ferocity, an emotional fluency that never slips into artifice. Her courtroom scenes have a rare clarity. She fights not with chest-thumping melodrama but with lived conviction. The shifting weight in her shoulders, the hesitations in her voice, the quiet with which she absorbs pain, all of that adds a truthful fragility beneath her courage. It is easily one of Yami’s strongest, most commanding screen turns.
Also Read: Yami Gautam and Emraan Hashmi’s Most Hard-hitting Dialogues From HAQ
Emraan Hashmi, as Abbas Khan, is equally compelling, playing a man shaped by privilege, belief and inherited power structures. He is not painted as a cardboard bigot; he is someone who has never questioned the script handed to him, and that is what makes his downfall tragic instead of theatrical. The more he clings to his ego, the more the system crumbles beneath him. Vartika Singh, as the second wife, leaves a striking impact. She is not reduced to glamour; her arc is empathetic, sensitive, and beautifully textured. Her confrontation moment opposite Yami is one of the film’s most emotionally loaded scenes. And Sheeba Chaddha, as the supporting lawyer on Yami’s side, injects gravity, wit and an unwavering steadiness; she knows exactly how to play strength in silence. Danish Hussain too makes an impact as Yami’s supportive father.
Much of this impact works because the writing is sharp, intelligent and deeply internalised. Reshu Nath’s screenplay understands the emotional minefield of faith versus constitutional rights without turning the narrative into an academic lecture. She builds conflict through spaces of doubt, lived contradiction and internal bias, not just external provocation. And Suparn S Varma’s direction keeps the storytelling grounded and balanced. He refuses sensationalism, he resists easy villainy, and he allows silences to speak. His directorial hand ensures Haq is not a polemic, it is a lived human drama.
While a more non-linear structure could have given the story even greater depth, what Haq achieves is still powerful, it centres the Indian woman’s agency over her life and her choices, irrespective of religious identity. It reminds men that responsibility cannot be abandoned through doctrine. It highlights how law must protect the vulnerable without fear. Haq calls for empathy not uproar.
Haq is a reminder that clarity, reason and moral courage can indeed be cinematic. Watch it for its sincerity, for its grace, for its argument but above all, watch it for the performances that give this battle a beating, breathing human heart. And watch it because it believes that the Indian woman, regardless of faith, deserves the Constitution as her shield, not the mercy of men.
Also Read: Emraan Hashmi, Yami Gautam’s Haq gets no censor cuts in India, UAE, UK, New Zealand and Australia
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