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THE ICON REVIEW: STORY VERSUS SPECTACLE
I wonder why we don’t have Eids like this year’s anymore.
The rush at ticket windows, shows packed till early morning, big box-office numbers — almost all of them real, to an extent — the dismissiveness of ride-hailing services as their drivers leave you stranded in the cinema lobby for hours before one of them takes pity on you… It is, suddenly, a great time for movies — at least for the next week or so!
While three Eid movies were set to debut this Eidul Fitr, one of them — Delhi Gate — bowed out in Sindh. The DCP [Digital Cinema Package], I am told, had a technical error but, as I personally witnessed, a lack of ticket sales and audience interest also played a part (I was the only one with a reservation for the one show at Karachi’s Nueplex Askari).
Delhi Gate, its director confirmed to Icon, will return to cinemas — as soon as Bullah and Aag Lagay Basti Mein’s audiences thin out. The reviews below tell you how good each film is.
Aag Lagay Basti Mein
Recently, at the end of a long discussion, an actor friend asked me the most basic of questions — one everyone knows, but only filmmakers persistently (and cynically) ask film critics: what, pray tell, is a good movie?
One could answer this in a few dozen ways (I’ve done it enough times that my eyes roll reflexively), but since this is show business, it’s better to lead with an example: Aag Lagay Basti Mein (ALBM) — it is, perhaps, as fine a specimen of a good motion picture as you’ll get.
Icon checks out the two Pakistani Eidul Fitr film releases — the Fahad Mustafa and Mahira Khan-starrer Aag Lagay Basti Mein and the Shaan Shahid-starrer Bullah — which present contrasting approaches to filmmaking. One shows attention to good storytelling. The other chooses spectacle and relies on star power
Irrespective of box-office numbers, ALBM is a smash, as we predicted in Icon a few weeks ago (Betting on Eid Again, published last month). It is a winner, not because of its expansive advertising campaign on distributor ARY Film’s sister television networks but because the filmmaker is smart enough to identify and neutralise the tripwires of narrative filmmaking.
That filmmaker is Bilal Atif Khan, one of the most promising newcomers in the recent Pakistani cinema landscape.
Bilal, who has directed and co-written the film with Naeem Ali, addresses the biggest gripes I have with our movies: forgetting the big picture, injustice to the premise, the inability to foresee structural and production pitfalls, and the absence of intelligently laid-out conflicts and resolutions.
ALBM is full of big and small conflicts — not the makeshift kind, but the character- and emotion-driven kind.
Barkat (at first played by Aashir Wajahat, then Fahad Mustafa) is a meek pacifist with a big heart, born into the wrong family: a bloodline of Sindhi dacoits. When things get tough in interior Sindh, the family migrates to Karachi and immediately learns that the city is a far bigger mugger than they ever were. While his dad (Shabbir Jan) and brother adjust — the latter snatches mobiles and purses — Barkat ends up in jail.
For Barkat, a life of crime — even one he is remotely connected to — gets a no-go from the heavens. This bedding, neatly tucked under the main narrative layer, pays off in spades later.
Before that, another key conflict enters the picture: the leading lady.
Almas (Mahira Khan) is a maid who loves to swipe left, right and centre — not on social media but anything that catches her eye: lipsticks, blushes, foundations and the odd Rs1,000 currency note.
Already divorced, she’s hardly interested when Barkat’s family comes calling with a rishta [marriage proposal]. However, her eyes pop open when she overhears that Barkat spent years in Dubai (he was in the slammer).
Almas had always dreamt of living in Dubai, so it’s an easy, romance-less ‘yes’ — until she learns the truth: the family simply wanted to be rid of Barkat. She and Barkat are sent packing right after the wedding, to a dingy, leaky, one-room house in a smelly corner of a railway colony.
They quickly learn to compromise. Barkat promises to save enough for their move to Dubai, gets a job, and the two place a savings jar titled ‘Doobai’ on their shelf. She, meanwhile, continues pilfering, without his knowledge. There’s a subtle hint here about relationships, about how, even in a marriage, things remain hidden.
ALBM bets the farm on building a unique relationship between Almas and Barkat; their romance takes a backseat to a more resilient bond of companionship and understanding.
Almas, like Barkat, has a kind heart — evident in a scene where she tries to make up with him after he takes money from their ‘Doobai’ jar to pay a neighbour’s child’s medical bills. This minor track, like most subplots in ALBM, leads to a quiet but harrowing moment of realisation that propels the film into the second half. By then, the emotional foundation — the similarities and differing worldviews — has been firmly laid by the director and co-writer.
Post-intermission, we get the kinetic turn. Barkat, realising life will never be fair, tells Almas they’re going to pull off one big robbery to set things right.
Enter — by a strange twist of fate — underworld don Marble Seth (Javed Sheikh), and his son Changezi (Tabish Hashmi), a petty young man wearing a ring with a poisonous sting.
You’re wrong if you think the story becomes predictable from here. Bilal and Naeem’s screenplay doesn’t lag. Nothing is superfluous. Every scene either builds character or plants tidbits they later cash in. Placing breadcrumbs with just enough emphasis that they register is a rarity in Pakistani cinema.
The screenplay gets perfect support from cinematographer Abid Rizvi’s wide-angle lens choices. Switching between 18 and 35mm cameras, these spherical lenses expand the frame just enough that the background and production design (credited to Team Big Bang) become as integral a character as Barkat and Almas. The wider field of view also makes the storytelling more immersive.
Unlike most Pakistani films, ALBM feels like a streamlined production whose screenplay was polished well before it went on set. That sheen reflects in the choreography of shots, leading to a lean, effective edit with nary a loose frame offsetting the narrative balance (the editors are Rasheed Khan, Salman Noorani and Bilal).
In the acting department, Tabish Hashmi is a pleasant surprise. His overweening bad guy gives him just enough leeway to become a villain worth remembering.
Javed Sheikh, too, is a surprise. During the film, I kept thinking back to a conversation I had with him, where I urged him to pursue roles that allow him to do something different (the topic of Meet the Supporting Cast, published in Icon two years ago). Marble Seth is that rare ‘different’ role — one he nails effortlessly.
Ayub Khosa and the supporting cast are just as good. Also — need one say it — Fahad Mustafa is a gem. Barkat, upon whose shoulders the narrative hangs, is a fragile, sensible, deeply conflicted human being, with a big, easily overwhelmed heart. He and Almas are as precise a representation of realistic human beings as commercial motion pictures allow.
Almas has a devilish side, but a line or two — and Mahira’s performance — reveal that her emotional barriers are rooted in hurt. This is Mahira’s most immersive and divergent role yet. Note the realistic, unflattering, mismatched make-up she wears and the slightly mangy hairdo; these small choices go a long way toward authenticating her character.
Like most women — and men — she pines for a better life that is forever out of the reach of the underprivileged. This makes their struggle more real, even when the film swivels into the fantastic — though never ludicrous — part of the story.
ALBM has only two minor shortfalls: the soundtrack is just okay, and there’s a negligible story hiccup at the very end involving Mahira and Ayub Khosa’s characters. Even so, the film easily slides into the list of the finest entertainers from Pakistani cinema.
It is a whip-smart, well-rounded film that shows you don’t need sultry item numbers or faux extravagance to tell a good story. A small, dingy house and two people will suffice if you have a clear head and the cinematic flair to make the mundane feel magical. You won’t find a better example of a good Pakistani film than this.
Bullah
In Bullah, the new action film starring Shaan Shahid — where the superstar does all the heavy lifting — the viewer is at the mercy of a warped sense of time, space and a truckload of unanswered questions.
Before we get to those questions (that get no answers), here’s the plot: Bullah (Shaan), a man who rives his SUV across Punjab farmlands, has a saviour complex. He saves a Sikh woman (Maham Mirza) from India, who is fleeing a gang of rural hoodlum rapists, then saves an infiltrator who is running from another rapist villain’s gang. Yes, almost all villains here are rapists.
The rural gang falls under Faqeera (Naeema Butt), the extravagantly stylised, brutal lord-of-lords of an agrestic mafia that mostly hurts or rapes people — the film never explains why. The modern mob in the city — whose main madman, Sahoo (Adnan Butt), also lingers in the countryside — is run by Bakshi (Saleem Sheikh).
Bullah is a man of justice who, we learn quite late in a passing line, was trained by — and later became a trainer of — US military men. The film leaves it at that.
If there is one thing Bullah is clear about, it is its adherence to the superficiality of its premise and an utter disinterest in answering even the most basic questions about its characters and story. One can almost feel the filmmakers’ shrug each time a question arises in your mind.
For every question the viewer has, Bullah has two responses: “It just is” and “Suspend your disbelief.” Mostly, it is the latter. For instance, these are the answers to some of the questions that arise in the viewer’s mind — or so one assumes from the narrative:
Q: Who is Bullah, the affluent man who walks into frames rescuing people?
A: Duh. He’s a good guy.
Q: What makes him tick?
A: He’s just like this. Why do you want to know more?
Q: What makes the villains evil? Why are they rapists?
A: They just are.
Q: Why does the film need three parallel villain tracks (Faqeera, Bakshi, Sahoo) when they never converge naturally?
A: Suspend your disbelief.
Q: Who is Sophia (Sara Loren), and why was she necessary — especially when she is never integral to the narrative?
A: The film needs glamour, and the hero needs a romantic subplot. You ask too many questions!
Writer Nasir Adeeb’s script — the screenplay is by director Shoaib Khan (Jackpot) — harks back to old Lollywood. Back then, a story made do with a simple premise and simplistic scene set-ups stitched together in the edit. The result felt rough, with too many narrative divergences — the story went here, there, everywhere before returning to the main idea at the climax. During this haphazardness, the passage of time often felt off.
In Bullah, this becomes a glaring oversight — particularly during the stretch where he meets, falls in love with and marries Sophia. One wonders: was that a dream or reality? And in either case, why is she such a passive, forsaken character, when her track naturally puts her dead centre in the plot?
The premise is still ideal for a Shaan Shahid actioner. It merges old Lollywood with new-age Hollywood, where the gandasa and lungi seamlessly give way to suits and martial arts gunplay. It’s a pity that Shaan doesn’t get to wear a lungi or wield a gandasa before donning a suit. His choice of clothes and artillery is defiantly modern, almost as if he’d do anything but step back into those roots.
The action by Azam Bhatti is mostly basic and fake. Punches land with hollow impact, bullets hit with lesser intensity, people fly and smash into things like a 2000s’ Bollywood flick. John Wick, this definitely ain’t.
It’s not all bad technically. Asrad Khan’s cinematography, though constricted to small sets and presumably quick light set-ups, is fine for the most part. The songs — especially Lajpalan’(Nik D. Gill and Miel) and Wekhi Kithay (Rehan Abbas) — are fantastic, though good music in a Shaan film is hardly a surprise.
The actors are professionals in every sense of the word. Adnan Butt and Saleem Sheikh growl, smirk and threaten as convincingly as their one-line characterisations allow. Naeema Butt is the standout, carving a major villain from a bland, superficially imagined character that meets a truly tragic end, screenwriting-wise (it is a bad cop-out).
Bullah would be a royal mess if Shaan weren’t holding the narrative and screen together with herculean might. Infusing emotion and conviction into Bullah, one sees him adjusting to the story’s pitfalls while adding small grounding touches on the fly.
Leaving make-up kits unpacked like Robert Redford (who was famous for his near non-use of make-up), Shaan could have used a touch-up or two in several scenes. The same can’t be said for Sara Loren, whose overdone “beauty” seems like a by-product of cosmetic surgery. While Shaan definitely looks older than usual, his performance is still top-notch (again, the same cannot be said for Loren).
However, one pattern needs addressing: after Waar, Yalghaar, O21, Zarrar and now Bullah, the covert-military man-saviour character has run dry. For Shaan, it is time to put it to rest, unless there is a genuinely unique story worth telling.
A better version of Bullah is buried within its janky exterior. Had editor Adeeb Khan and scriptwriter Nasir Adeeb asked themselves the basic questions mentioned above, found believable reasons for the story’s conflicts, and cut the superfluous tracks (Bakshi, Sahoo and the Sikh girl’s tracks are expendable), Bullah’s roar might have shaken the box office. Right now, it is a whimper.
At the end of the day, the choice between ALBM and Bullah is the choice between story and (something resembling) spectacle. Both films are still running in theatres and, given the gloom and doom of real life, I would strongly suggest you head to the cinema — if only to watch ALBM.
Rated “U”, Aag Lagay Basti Mein is an ARY Films’ release. Bullah, rated “PG” for fake blood, violence and adult themes, is an HKC release
The writer is Icon’s primary film reviewer
Published in Dawn, ICON, March 29th, 2026
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SMOKERS’ CORNER: GHOSTS ON THE SCREEN
On the screen, horrific images of World War II flicker, showing the skeletal figures of Jewish men, women and children in Nazi concentration camps being marched into the horrors of the “Final Solution.”
It is a sombre cinematic and television ritual we have come to expect. Yet, if one observes the scheduling of these screened tragedies, a pattern emerges.
Whenever the state of Israel faces widespread condemnation for its brutal excursions in the Middle East, the Western entertainment industry develops a sudden, renewed obsession with Jewish victimhood during the last world war.
This is what media scholars call “affective management”, a term describing how our emotional responses are curated by those who control the narrative. In 1988, academics Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky examined this as an attempt to mitigate the public relations (PR) disaster of the present with the trauma of the past.
By re-running the tragedy faced by the Jewish people at the hands of the Nazis, the Western entertainment industry provides a moral counterweight that often dilutes contemporary criticism of Israeli state violence. The criticism becomes ‘antisemitism’.
In the 1970s and 1980s, as Israel’s image gradually mutated from the ‘underdog’ of 1948 to a regional leviathan, especially following its 1982 invasion of Lebanon, Western airwaves were hit with a wave of Holocaust dramas. The 1978 NBC miniseries Holocaust did not just win Emmys. It reached hundreds of millions of viewers precisely as the international community began to grapple with Israel’s diplomatic isolation at the United Nations (UN).
From acclaimed Holocaust dramas to nationalist blockbusters, the strategic revival of past trauma can influence public perception, shifting attention from present-day violence to the moral weight of historical suffering
When the First Intifada broke out in the occupied territories of Palestine in the late 1980s, during which young Palestinians fought Israeli troops with slingshots, the American broadcasting network ABC responded with the expensive multi-part epic War and Remembrance.
As the world watched nightly news footage of Israeli soldiers using violent tactics against Palestinian stone-throwers, War and Remembrance provided an emotional diversion. It ensured that the image of the Jew as the eternal victim remained the dominant cultural framework, even as the Israeli state was acting as the primary aggressor.
In 1997, media scholar Yosefa Loshitzky noted that the “sacralisation of the Holocaust” provides a moral shield, creating a binary where the memory of a past genocide is used to silence discourse on Israel’s contemporary human rights violations.
Films such as The Zone of Interest (2023), which depicts a troubled German commandant of a concentration camp during World War II, do not simply appear by chance. They are launched with massive fanfare at film festivals, precisely when discourse on apartheid or genocide in the Middle East reaches a boiling point.
In the age of Netflix and streaming, this reflex has become even more frequent. During the recent ‘Gaza War’, in which Israeli forces killed tens — if not hundreds — of thousands of Palestinian men, women and children, and during Israel’s recent attacks on Lebanon and Iran, streaming platforms seemed to have gone into overdrive.
Suddenly, films such as Schindler’s List (1993) and The Pianist (2002), meditations on the horrors of the Holocaust, were pushed to the top of ‘recommended’ lists, while old and new documentaries on World War II appeared to tell the same story repeatedly.
This is what the American literature professor Michael Rothberg, in his book Multidirectional Memory, identifies as “screen memory.” The term describes a historical trauma brought forward specifically to obscure a problematic contemporary reality. Viewers become so preoccupied weeping for the victims of the 1940s that they find themselves with very little emotional bandwidth left for the families currently being pulled from the rubble in Gaza and Iran.
However, this is not exclusively a Western speciality. Bollywood has also mastered this art of cultural deflection. Whenever the Modi government in India faces international heat over its increasingly exclusionary treatment of minorities, the Mumbai dream factory starts to churn out ‘epics’ about internal enemies whose ancestors supposedly sought to destroy Hinduism.
This is the Indian version of “competitive victimhood”, or the act of shouting about the past sufferings of the ‘self’ so loudly that the current suffering of ‘the other’ becomes mere background noise.
For example, 2020’s Tanhaji: The Unsung Warrior reimagined India’s historical Muslim rulers as monstrous invaders while elevating Hindu warriors as the ultimate defenders of Hinduism. Similarly, films such as The Kashmir Files (2022) or Article 370 (2024) framed the Indian state’s military presence in Kashmir not as an occupation but as a moral necessity, to prevent a return of past tragedies that befell Hindus.
In this narrative, the ‘other’ (largely Muslim) is cast as the eternal aggressor. This shift has been described by the US-based academic Nilanjana Bhattacharjya as the “new Bollywood”, where the screen memory of past conflicts is used to displace the immediate reality of contemporary state-led violence.
This trend went into overdrive after the Indian air force suffered major losses against Pakistan in May 2025. This time, instead of resurfacing a past trauma, a past victory from the 1971 Indo-Pakistan war was brought forward to displace the reality of a recent defeat. This year’s Border 2 is an example.
The Turks, under the banner of ‘Neo-Ottomanism’, have followed a similar script. While Ankara’s regional ambitions draw Western criticism, Turkish television has been dominated by historical fantasies such as Dirili: Erturul. Such shows re-imagine the Ottoman past as a period of heroic resistance against the West and internal traitors. As the Germany-based transcultural studies scholar Josh Carney points out, these dramas function as a “moral reset” for the modern state, priming the audience to view Turkiye as a beleaguered fortress defending its sacred heritage.
The early 20th century Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci wrote that dominant groups shape “cultural common sense”, making their version of history the absolute moral benchmark. When the Western entertainment industry consistently rewinds material on the violence against Jews, it establishes a framework where the security of the Jewish state is an ethical necessity that transcends international law.
By flooding the public sphere with historical trauma, the industry effectively moves the focus from the present to the past. The result is a self-reinforcing loop, where the market for historical tragedy becomes most active exactly when that tragedy serves a political purpose.
Across the board, from Hollywood to Mumbai, the industry’s reflex turns complex contemporary human rights issues into a binary struggle of survivors versus villains. It is a potent form of cultural hegemony, ensuring that the ghosts of the past remain more real to us than the dying children of the present.
Published in Dawn, EOS, March 29th, 2026
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HISTORY: THE ALMOST RISE OF GWADAR
When Shah Abbas I ascended the throne of the Safavid Empire in 1588, the political geography of Western and South Asia was undergoing a profound transformation. Sixteenth-century colonial expansionism was one of several realignments in the region, and maritime trade through the Arabian Sea was fast gaining new importance.
For more than a century, the Portuguese Empire exercised formidable control over this coastline. In 1515, they captured Hormuz from Shah Ismail I, and their hold stretched all the way to their colonial capital at Goa, which they had seized in 1510.
Through Vasco da Gama’s voyage at the close of the 15th century, the Portuguese had reached the Indian Ocean via the Cape of Good Hope. By the 1600s, however, this dominance was beginning to weaken. New European rivals, such as the East India Company (EIC), were entering Asian waters, determined to claim a share of the lucrative trade.
The turning point came in 1612, when English ships defeated a Portuguese fleet in the Battle of Swally, fought off the coast of Gujarat. The Mughal emperor Jahangir, impressed by this naval victory, soon granted the EIC permission to establish a trading factory at Surat in 1613. Later, a British-Safavid operation regained control of Hormuz in 1622. These encounters significantly altered the balance of power in the region.
In 1613, the East India Company established its first major trading base in the Arabian Sea at Surat in Indian Gujarat. Another contender was Gwadar…
Decades prior, the Portuguese had already lost favour across the Makran coast with Baloch groups. In Asia Portuguesa, the Portuguese historian Manuel de Faria e Sousa writes that Gwadar was destroyed in 1581, along with Pasni.
Almost coincidental then, that our protagonist, Robert Sherley, was born that same year.
The Brothers Sherley
Born in Sussex, Sherley belonged to a family of English gentry whose fortunes had declined. At the end of the 16th century, he travelled east with his elder brother Anthony, arriving at the court of Shah Abbas in Isfahan.
Their arrival in Persia would prove transformative. The Sherley brothers presented themselves as useful intermediaries between the Safavids and Europe, and Shah Abbas found their services valuable. Robert was kept by the Shah to take part in the Safavid-Ottoman Wars and later became an envoy of the Shah.
Over the following years, the younger Sherley travelled widely across Europe, representing Safavid interests before various courts. Dressed in Persian robes and presenting himself as the Shah’s ambassador, he became a fascinating diplomatic figure of the age. An Englishman stood serving a Persian monarch while negotiating with European rulers.
The Expedition
It was during one of his journeys to Persia that Robert found himself aboard the English ship, Expedition, in 1613. The vessel sailed under the command of Christopher Newport, bound for the Indian Ocean.
The ship reached the Makran coast and anchored off Gwadar on September 17, 1613. After its destruction, the port was on the margins of both the Mughals who had conquered Sindh, and the Safavids. Nazerbeg, a Persian accompanying Sherley, went on land and brought back a message that, while Makran was not formally under the authority of Shah Abbas, he would be welcomed and provided with safe passage inland.
The offer was appealing. Preparations began for the overland journey towards Isfahan. Sherley’s baggage and gifts were sent ashore, while arrangements were made for the caravan that would escort him. According to Walter Payton, as reproduced in Purchas’ Pilgrims — a nearly fantastical 17th century travel collection by Englishmen and others, which merit the need to vet multiple sources — things did not go exactly as planned.
By chance, a sailor aboard the Expedition overheard a conversation, in which Payton writes “…they had consulted and concluded upon the Massacre of us all.” Instead of escorting Sherley safely across Makran, they intended to lure members of the ship ashore, kill them and seize their property.
The discovery forced a rapid change of plans. Several locals who had boarded the ship were detained as hostages until Sherley’s goods were returned. Only after his possessions had been safely recovered did the Expedition raise anchor and depart Gwadar, now sailing towards Sindh.
Sherley’s reaction to the encounter, however, was somewhat unexpected.
A Factory that Never Was
Despite a narrow escape, Robert lay convinced that Gwadar possessed considerable commercial potential. According to British anthropologist Brian Spooner, Sherley wrote to the EIC, suggesting that the port could serve as a base for English trade with Persia.
Its location offered several advantages, wrote Sherley. It provided autonomy, close passage to the Safavids and “the richest traffic in the world.” From such a base, Sherley argued, English merchants could develop profitable commerce in Persian silk and other goods.
According to US-based historian Daniel Razzari, it was partly at his insistence that the British helped the Safavid’s recapture Hormuz. Therefore, instead of Surat as the site of the first English factory, it could have very nearly been at Gwadar. However, Persia was seen as a trading backwater and an Ottoman-Safavid truce reduced the need for maritime trade. The EIC’s attention was also already fixed on the opportunities presented by Mughal India.
Moreover, Sherley himself had become a somewhat ambiguous figure for the EIC. England had become Protestant, yet Robert cultivated close relationships with Catholic Europe during his diplomatic missions, promising them access to Persia if the British refused. Company officials, such as Thomas Roe, were wary of allowing an independent adventurer to shape their commercial strategy, particularly since the EIC held exclusive shipping rights for the English court in the Indian Ocean.
The proposal faded from consideration.
Gwadar Onwards
Gwadar’s later history followed a more regional path. The port remained a modest settlement along the Makran coast for much of the early modern period. In the late 18th century, it briefly assumed greater importance when the Khan of Kalat, Mir Nasir Khan I Ahmedzai, gave refuge to Sultan bin Ahmad Al Busaidi, who had fled a power struggle in Oman.
Mir Nasir Khan’s initial intentions were to help Sultan take over Oman, but then later offered him refuge at Gwadar, to rule as a fiefdom. Sultan then used the port as a base to regain his throne in Muscat, linking Gwadar to the political fortunes of the Omani dynasty. He kept Gwadar and, under Omani patronage, Gwadar and Chahbahar outstripped similar ports such as Jiwani and Pasni.
Meanwhile, Sultan was in no hurry to return it to the Khan of Kalat, who by now had to resist insurrections from feudatory states, later on spurred by the British Raj. Omani hold over the Makran developed further.
In the long narrative of imperial expansion in the Indian Ocean, the episode of Robert Sherley’s visit to Gwadar might appear little more than a historical curiosity, yet it offers a small reminder of how contingent such histories can be. The establishment of the EIC at Surat in 1613 can be seen as an inevitable development. Sherley’s brief encounter with Gwadar suggests otherwise. The possibility remains an intriguing footnote to the early encounters between Europe and the shores of the Arabian Sea.
From being the very first territories that could have fallen into British hands, Balochistan ended up amongst the very last, under Robert Sandeman and the creation of the Balochistan Agency in 1871. When Prince Karim Aga Khan IV funded the purchase of Gwadar in 1958, it also became amongst the last territories to be brought into Pakistan.
The writer is Managing Editor, Folio Books
Published in Dawn, EOS, March 29th, 2026
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MOTOR SPORTS: A FORMULA 1 REHAUL
Max Verstappen, four times world champion and the defining driver of the last era, says the new cars do not feel like Formula 1 anymore. Lando Norris, who ended that era by beating him to the 2025 title, says they are a lot of fun.
Both of them are probably right, and that tension tells you everything you need to know about what Formula 1 has done to itself for 2026.
This is not a routine regulation tweak. The sport has overhauled its engines, rewritten how aerodynamics work, replaced its overtaking system and switched to entirely sustainable fuel.
It is the kind of change that creates new champions and ends dynasties, and the paddock knows it.
THE ENGINE AT THE HEART OF IT ALL
Every major shift in Formula 1 starts with the engine, and 2026 is no different. The cars are still powered by 1.6 litre V6 hybrids, but the architecture of how that power is produced has been torn apart and rebuilt.
The previous generation used two systems to recover energy and feed it back into the battery. The Motor Generator Unit-Kinetic (MGU-K) harvested energy from braking, while the Motor Generator Unit-Heat (MGU-H) pulled heat energy from exhaust gases passing through the turbo-charger. Together they accounted for around 20 percent of the car’s total power, maxing out at 120 kilowatts.
The sport has changed the architecture of its engines, forced drivers to rethink aerodynamics and strategy, and switched to entirely sustainable fuel — what will this transformation mean for the 2026 season?
The MGU-H is gone. It was brutally expensive, relevant to almost no road car technology, and arguably the single biggest barrier to new manufacturers entering the sport. In its place, the MGU-K has been transformed, with its electrical output nearly tripling to 350 kilowatts and producing a power split of roughly 50/50 between the combustion engine and the hybrid system. That is not a refinement of what came before. It is a different philosophy entirely.
DRIVING AS A MENTAL SPORT
The 2026 cars will be slower overall. Reduced downforce means lower cornering speeds. But slower through corners does not mean slower everywhere. The extra electrical power makes these cars explosive out of corners and rapid on the straights, where the battery boost has the most impact.
What changes most profoundly is what happens inside the cockpit. The 2022 to 2025 era rewarded drivers who could feel the limits of aerodynamic grip and commit to corners at terrifying speeds. The 2026 era will reward drivers who can think like chess players, managing a battery that is simultaneously their greatest weapon and their most precious resource.
The Drag Reduction System (DRS), which is the default overtaking mechanism since 2011, has been retired. Its replacement is a two mode system. Overtake mode delivers a surge of battery power when a driver is within one second of the car ahead. Boost mode can be deployed anywhere on the lap for maximum electrical output, useful for both attacking and defending.
The catch is that every burst of power drains the battery, and recovering that charge requires real discipline. Super-clipping, where the engine is intentionally dialled back at the end of straights to collect energy rather than hold top speed, will become a standard tool. The fastest way around a lap in 2026 will not be to use maximum power at every opportunity. It will be to know precisely when not to.
FUEL, CLIMATE AND A BROADER AMBITION
2026 also marks Formula 1’s full switch to 100 percent sustainable fuel, up from the 10 percent renewable ethanol blend introduced in 2022, in line with the sport’s goal of reaching net zero carbon by 2030.
It has not been straightforward. Ben Hodkinson, Technical Director of Red Bull Ford Powertrains, has spoken about the challenges posed by sustainable fuels, whose chemical elements have varying evaporation points and must ignite at higher temperatures than conventional fuel.
The longer ambition is that technology developed under the extreme demands of Formula 1 can eventually find relevance beyond the racetrack, contributing to a broader shift in how the world powers its engines.
THE WORKS TEAMS ADVANTAGE
The tighter relationship between engine and aerodynamics in 2026 creates a structural advantage for teams that build their own power units.
Active aerodynamic flaps on the front and rear wings open automatically on straights to shed drag, then close again for corners to restore downforce, working in close coordination with the hybrid deployment strategy.
Works teams such as Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull design their cars knowing every dimension of their own engine, allowing them to package everything without compromise. Customer teams buying their engines from someone else are working with hardware designed for a different car, and those constraints can quietly bleed away performance in ways that are hard to recover.
WILL HISTORY REPEAT ITSELF?
The last time Formula 1 rewrote the engine regulations was 2014, and one team simply got it more right than everyone else. Mercedes arrived with an MGU-H so superior to the competition that it underpinned eight consecutive constructors’ championships. The fear is always that a regulation reset hands one team a headstart the rest of the field spends years trying to close.
There are structural reasons to think 2026 will be different. This is the first major engine overhaul under Formula 1’s cost cap, which limits how aggressively teams can spend to develop or recover performance.
The regulations also require works teams to supply their customers with the same engine specification, which was not the case 11 years ago. That said, the hunt for edges never stops. Mercedes has reportedly found a loophole in the engine compression ratio rules that rivals believe could translate into a meaningful power gain.
Whether that unravels or holds, it is a reminder that parity in Formula 1 is always a negotiation.
WHAT THIS MEANS FROM HERE
For the last four seasons, Formula 1 was a story about aerodynamics. Teams that mastered the air, dominated. That chapter is closing. The 2026 era will be written by whoever masters the energy, the engine and the fine line between using power and preserving it.
The skills that made someone the fastest driver of the last era may not be the same skills that make someone the fastest driver of this one. That uncertainty is what makes 2026 one of the most genuinely open seasons in a long time.
CLOSER TO HOME THAN YOU THINK
For Pakistan, the thread worth pulling on is the fuel story. Pakistan is among the countries most acutely exposed to climate change, from the catastrophic floods of recent years to prolonged heat events that have tested cities and agricultural systems alike. All of this despite contributing a fraction of the emissions that drive it.
The sight of one of the world’s most fuel-intensive sports committing fully to sustainable energy is, at minimum, a symbolic moment worth noting.
But there is a more practical dimension too. Interest in electric vehicles is clearly building in Pakistan, both in the bike and car segments, even as the infrastructure to support that transition remains thin. The innovation being stress-tested on circuits this season is aimed squarely at the gap between where energy technology is today and where it needs to go.
That is not just a Formula 1 problem. It is ours too.
The writer is a marketing and communications professional. X: @adaffan
Published in Dawn, EOS, March 29th, 2026
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