

Pakeezah has second thoughts about leaving and rushes back home but alas, her brother has come back and closed the gate. Tere Bina introduced me to a plethora of many unique ones.

When Pakeezah ran away and her father clasped his chest – face palm, face palm, face palm!Įavesdropping was my go to coincidence. Except the one whose heart lands him/her in the hospital is not the one involved in the earth shattering love in the first place. When Umair (Sami Khan) tells Pakeezah (Neelum Munir) nobody will ever love her as much as he can and each time he grasps her hand with the – wait for it – ‘ yeh haath chornay kay leeyay nahin thaama’ line, man, the romantic in me does not stand up and jump, rather hides its head in the ground like an ostrich!īecause let’s face it, the link with the heart (quite literally) in a love story has only deepened with time. While I get love stories do boast of passionate love, the dialogues in this one lacked conviction. Romeo and Juliet, Laila Majnu all take a backseat – this couple’s love reaches new heights. Not sure if that is an actual dialogue uttered ever but hey, the underlying meaning is the same. No, I don’t think that actual dialogue was uttered in this drama.

‘Mein mar jaoon ga, meri mohabbat nahin maray gi’.
