A Father's Diary
- 2021
- 1h 53m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Suspicions relationship of a teenager girl with another girl from a conservative South Asian family leads into a big domestic violence and catastrophe to the family.Suspicions relationship of a teenager girl with another girl from a conservative South Asian family leads into a big domestic violence and catastrophe to the family.Suspicions relationship of a teenager girl with another girl from a conservative South Asian family leads into a big domestic violence and catastrophe to the family.
- Awards
- 39 wins & 18 nominations total
Featured reviews
This is not a film you simply watch and forget-it demands reflection. Long after the credits, you find yourself questioning your own notions of family, tradition, and unconditional love. It doesn't provide easy answers but instead forces the audience to wrestle with uncomfortable truths. That's what makes it so powerful. It's a cinematic experience that leaves you changed, urging you to think, feel, and reflect long after you've left the theater.
Beyond its powerful story, the film is visually breathtaking. The international locations-Canada, USA, Australia, and Bangladesh-are not just backdrops but integral to the narrative, symbolizing the universality of its themes. The cinematography paints emotions across the screen, each frame as evocative as a painting. When paired with its emotional depth, the film becomes a work of art that is both visually and emotionally stunning.
At its core, the film asks: what does it mean to love unconditionally? Hassan learns that love cannot be chained to tradition-it must allow freedom to truly flourish. This lesson resonates deeply, not just for parents but for anyone in relationships shaped by expectations. The film becomes a mirror, urging us to examine how we love and whether our love is truly free from conditions.
At its core, this isn't just a South Asian story-it's a human one. Fathers everywhere will recognize Hassan's fear, and children everywhere will relate to Dina's longing for acceptance. By focusing on emotions rather than stereotypes, the film achieves universality. It proves that good cinema doesn't belong to one culture-it belongs to all who have felt love, pain, and family struggle.
The generational conflict in the film is brilliantly depicted. Hassan embodies the values of the past, built on duty and honor, while Dina represents the future-one rooted in authenticity and self-acceptance. The clash between the two is heartbreaking, yet it's handled with compassion, ensuring both sides are understood. This balance makes the film stand out, inviting empathy instead of judgment, and leaving the audience questioning their own beliefs.
Details
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- Runtime
- 1h 53m(113 min)
- Color
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