After Love
- 2020
- 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
4.7K
YOUR RATING
Set in the port town of Dover, Mary Hussain suddenly finds herself a widow following the unexpected death of her husband. A day after the burial, she discovers he has a secret just twenty-on... Read allSet in the port town of Dover, Mary Hussain suddenly finds herself a widow following the unexpected death of her husband. A day after the burial, she discovers he has a secret just twenty-one miles across the English Channel in Calais.Set in the port town of Dover, Mary Hussain suddenly finds herself a widow following the unexpected death of her husband. A day after the burial, she discovers he has a secret just twenty-one miles across the English Channel in Calais.
- Won 1 BAFTA Award
- 13 wins & 16 nominations total
Narayan David Hecter
- Anthony
- (as David Hecter)
Jeff Mirza
- Ahmed
- (voice)
Aaron Chawla
- Young Ahmed
- (voice)
Seema Morar
- Family Member
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Her pain is so palpable, she has so beautifully portrayed a woman's world coming crashing over her and then all over again and again, and to discover a bitter sweet emotion, finally a warm love emerges through it all. Such a myriad of feelings.
After Love tackles bigamy. After the sudden death of her Pakistani husband Ahmed. His English wife Mary (Joanna Scanlan) who converted Islam and took the Muslim name Fahima learns that he had a long term relationship with a woman in France.
Ahmed worked on the ferries. He regularly travelled between Dover and Calais. To learn more about his double life, Mary sought out Genevieve (Nathalie Richard) who mistook Mary for a cleaner. She also learned that Genevieve had a son with Ahmed. A teenager called Solomon.
Instead of confronting Genevieve, Mary learns more about her late husband's second family.
The directorial debut of Aleem Khan. After Love is a slow burn film, a character study of Mary who is angry at her husband's deception as well as sadness over his death. There are symbolic visions of the cracks in her life. She examines her rotund body after she has met the slimmer Genevieve as her husband's betrayal lingers in her mind.
The film also contrasts the two characters. Mary became a devout Muslim, who learned some Urdu and was able to cook Pakistani food. Genevieve did neither of these things. At one point Mary retorts, 'I did something for my husband that no one else could.' Hence why Ahmed stayed married to her.
In the end After Love is about reconciliation and understanding rather than bitterness. A thoughtful film.
Ahmed worked on the ferries. He regularly travelled between Dover and Calais. To learn more about his double life, Mary sought out Genevieve (Nathalie Richard) who mistook Mary for a cleaner. She also learned that Genevieve had a son with Ahmed. A teenager called Solomon.
Instead of confronting Genevieve, Mary learns more about her late husband's second family.
The directorial debut of Aleem Khan. After Love is a slow burn film, a character study of Mary who is angry at her husband's deception as well as sadness over his death. There are symbolic visions of the cracks in her life. She examines her rotund body after she has met the slimmer Genevieve as her husband's betrayal lingers in her mind.
The film also contrasts the two characters. Mary became a devout Muslim, who learned some Urdu and was able to cook Pakistani food. Genevieve did neither of these things. At one point Mary retorts, 'I did something for my husband that no one else could.' Hence why Ahmed stayed married to her.
In the end After Love is about reconciliation and understanding rather than bitterness. A thoughtful film.
After Love (2020) follows a British widow, who discovers her late husband has a secret family in France. It really captures a very complex grieving process. The film is very slow and has lots of quiet scenes with few pieces of dialogue. The main character is a British Muslim woman who converts to Islam before marriage. The acting is great, especially from Joanna Scanlan. It's different to what I expected but a great hidden gem. Less than 90 minutes. Definitely recommend this dramatic tale of grief and love. The director shows the quiet days after losing a loved one and how different people process this. Some truly teary moments.
Greetings again from the darkness. There are multiple ways one can interpret the first feature film from writer-director Aleem Khan; however for me, this worked best as a study of identity - how we define ourselves and our life. It's an unusual start to a story. A woman is going about her normal kitchen duties, preparing tea for her husband who is relaxing in the other room after an event. Before the opening credits roll, the man suddenly and unexpectedly passes away. This sends the wife into grief and shock ... although an even bigger shock awaits her.
Joanna Scanlan plays Mary, the wife. She's an Englishwoman and converted Muslim. While organizing her late husband's wallet, phone, and texts, she comes across information that spurs her curiosity and sends her on a journey via train, ferry, and taxi, 21 miles across the English Channel to Calais. There are three 'natural' reactions to finding out your spouse has a secret family. First, confront them about it ... not possible in this case. Second, shrug it off and move on with your life. Third, confront the 'other' family. Somehow, Mary finds a way to botch her confrontation. She ends up being mistaken for the cleaning woman by Genevieve (Nathalie Richard), and Mary finds herself inside the home where a family picture - quite similar to the one Mary carries - sits on display. Also surprising is the presence of a teenage boy named Solomon (Talid Ariss).
The next few days are quite awkward for Mary and us viewers. She's helping pack up Genevieve's belongings for an upcoming move, and Mary's husband's shirts are included in these items. A striking contrast of physicality exists between the two women, and Mary quietly entrenches herself into the lives of Genevieve and Solomon, who struggle with a strained mother-son relationship. We can't help but wonder how this quandary will resolve, and the longer it goes on, the more challenging it becomes for Mary to come clean.
Director Khan includes numerous variations on cracks, splits, fissures, and breaks ... some more subtle than others. Each represents the collapse of the façade Mary previously understood as her life. She even catches herself making two cups of tea out of habit, and repeatedly listening to the final saved voicemail from her husband ... desperately searching for assurances of his love or clues that she might have missed. Frequent movie watchers will recognize the lead actors here, as Ms. Scanlan (NOTES ON A SCANDAL, 2004) and Ms. Richard (CACHE', 2005) work frequently. Composer Chris Roe's string score blends nicely with the on screen stress as the pulling back the curtain on one man's life exposes the fractured world of others. Love, grief, and identity, are all on trial here as we are reminded to find our own identity.
Opens in theaters on January 20, 2023.
Joanna Scanlan plays Mary, the wife. She's an Englishwoman and converted Muslim. While organizing her late husband's wallet, phone, and texts, she comes across information that spurs her curiosity and sends her on a journey via train, ferry, and taxi, 21 miles across the English Channel to Calais. There are three 'natural' reactions to finding out your spouse has a secret family. First, confront them about it ... not possible in this case. Second, shrug it off and move on with your life. Third, confront the 'other' family. Somehow, Mary finds a way to botch her confrontation. She ends up being mistaken for the cleaning woman by Genevieve (Nathalie Richard), and Mary finds herself inside the home where a family picture - quite similar to the one Mary carries - sits on display. Also surprising is the presence of a teenage boy named Solomon (Talid Ariss).
The next few days are quite awkward for Mary and us viewers. She's helping pack up Genevieve's belongings for an upcoming move, and Mary's husband's shirts are included in these items. A striking contrast of physicality exists between the two women, and Mary quietly entrenches herself into the lives of Genevieve and Solomon, who struggle with a strained mother-son relationship. We can't help but wonder how this quandary will resolve, and the longer it goes on, the more challenging it becomes for Mary to come clean.
Director Khan includes numerous variations on cracks, splits, fissures, and breaks ... some more subtle than others. Each represents the collapse of the façade Mary previously understood as her life. She even catches herself making two cups of tea out of habit, and repeatedly listening to the final saved voicemail from her husband ... desperately searching for assurances of his love or clues that she might have missed. Frequent movie watchers will recognize the lead actors here, as Ms. Scanlan (NOTES ON A SCANDAL, 2004) and Ms. Richard (CACHE', 2005) work frequently. Composer Chris Roe's string score blends nicely with the on screen stress as the pulling back the curtain on one man's life exposes the fractured world of others. Love, grief, and identity, are all on trial here as we are reminded to find our own identity.
Opens in theaters on January 20, 2023.
What would you do if you're left all alone, found the partner you lived for was only half known, spent his days spanning channels, sailing parallel canals, his investment a fraction of the effort that you'd sown.
An engaging story with a standout performance at its core although it might leave you thinking that in their position you might behave ever so slightly differently, but who really knows how they would react under circumstances like these.
An engaging story with a standout performance at its core although it might leave you thinking that in their position you might behave ever so slightly differently, but who really knows how they would react under circumstances like these.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film received its world premiere at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival and had a theatrical release in the United Kingdom on 4 June 2021. The film received positive reviews from critics, with praise for Khan's direction and Scanlan's performance. Both were nominated at the 75th BAFTA awards, with Scanlan winning for best actress.
- SoundtracksKabhi Kabhi Mere Dil Mein (Duet)
Written by Khayyam and Sahir Ludhianvi
Performed by Mukesh and Lata Mangeshkar
Courtesy of Saregama PLC.
By arrangement with A&G Sync
- How long is After Love?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Tình Yêu Còn Lại
- Filming locations
- Kingsdown, Dover, Kent, England, UK(Mary and Ahmed's home, private residence)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $532,122
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content