Aimun Profile picture
If someone loves you like Snape loved Lily, get a restraining order.
Jun 3, 2023 20 tweets 4 min read
Sometimes I think about the fact that Farjaad immediately turned to see Umeed's reaction to what everyone in this moment thought was a marriage proposal on Farjaad's behalf before he let himself smile and I suddenly get so many thoughts. This boy has *just* realized that he was wrong in his assumption about why Umeed is the way she is.

All this time he had thought she acted so rashly, with so much self-importance because she was spoilt.

It was just *today* he found out that she acted this way in rebellion.
Jun 2, 2023 16 tweets 3 min read
This trash app is made for people to take offense, so they'll misinterpret this and get mad but I'll just say it.

Imran Riaz Khan is a Pakistani citizen. His civil rights are inherently tied to mine. And so principally it is important that he be presented in counrts.

HOWEVER - The reason you'd see people who understand this very concept of basic civil rights clamouring for Jibran Nasir's safety in a way they are not for Imran Riaz Khan is because the former understood that our civil rights are tied to one another and the latter didn't.
Jun 1, 2023 7 tweets 3 min read
Apologies to everyone who followed me before I started watching this show but I love these so much.

I love this song so much. And I love this song on them so much. Just the narrative on this one?

*chef's kiss*
Jun 1, 2023 7 tweets 2 min read
Fine. I will just say it publicly. If you plan to make him wear a tank top, please do not shoot a pool scene.

It does not look hot. It looks really cringe. And like. I get it that there are censors about this but you don't HAVE to shoot a pool scene. And like. I know the context here is that he wasn't swimming in the pool. He was walking next to it and she pulled him in.

But the way this was shot, it was supposed to be sensual and steamy. And sigh. It's not. It's just an indication and you are SUPPOSED to feel that this is -
Nov 6, 2018 32 tweets 6 min read
Hello. This is a thread analyzing the feminist undertones in the telling of Veer Zaara by a humanities student who really needs to figure out better things to do with her degree.

*cracks knuckles* I will begin with the scene that captured my attention in this regards, and probably the most direct conversation in the film regarding masculinity and femininity: The conversation between Zaara and her mother upon Zaara's return to Pakistan and in the midst of her wedding prep.