Emraan Hashmi Reveals Why Playing Against His Beliefs Is So Exciting

Emraan Hashmi finds playing characters distant from his belief system particularly exciting as an actor. He's currently portraying lawyer Mohd. Ahmed Khan in the film 'Haq', inspired by the landmark Shah Bano case. The actor believes this process helps him understand perspectives completely different from his own. His upcoming film tackles the controversial 1985 Supreme Court ruling on Muslim women's maintenance rights.

Key Points: Emraan Hashmi on Playing Characters Against His Belief System

  • Emraan plays lawyer Mohd. Ahmed Khan in film inspired by Shah Bano case
  • Actor explores characters completely opposite to his personal worldview
  • Hashmi finds understanding unfamiliar perspectives through acting process
  • 'Haq' tackles landmark Supreme Court triple talaq maintenance ruling
3 min read

Emraan Hashmi: Playing characters which are distant from my belief system is exciting space to explore

Emraan Hashmi discusses the challenge of playing characters distant from his personal beliefs in upcoming film 'Haq', inspired by the landmark Shah Bano case.

"The more distant it is from your belief system, the more interesting it becomes - Emraan Hashmi"

Mumbai, Nov 5

Actor Emraan Hashmi, who is gearing up for the release of his upcoming film ‘Haq’, has said that actors love playing characters which are distant from their belief system.

The actor spoke with IANS ahead of the film’s release at a 5-star property in the Juhu area of Mumbai. ‘Haq’ is inspired from the landmark case of Mohd. Ahmed Khan v. Shah Bano Begum. Shah Bano, a 62-year-old Muslim woman, sought maintenance from her husband after being divorced through triple talaq. The Supreme Court ruled in her favor under Section 125 of the Criminal Procedure Code, stating that maintenance applies to all citizens irrespective of religion.

Emraan essays the role inspired by Mohd. Ahmed Khan, a lawyer, in the film. The character is far off from his personal beliefs and world view. When asked how does he bridge the gap between his personal choices, your personal perspective or opinion and a character who is diametrically opposite to his beliefs, he said, “You you might play characters that are close to your ideology or your belief system but the whole idea of being an artiste is also to play characters you don't understand. So, in the process of playing that character you start understanding them better”.

Breaking down his process of approaching such parts, he told IANS, “When you read the script, you re-read it, when you play those, enact those scenes emotionally, something happens where it is like, ‘Okay this is what this character comes from, this is the truth of the character’”.

He further mentioned, “So that's something that's exciting for all actors, and the more distant it is from your belief system, from your ideology, your world view, the more interesting it becomes because you understand yourself, and when you're playing a character that's close to you, then where’s the fun in that? You know exactly what that is but then doing something that you don't understand, that's the challenge and that is also a certain awakening”.

The verdict on Mohd. Ahmed Khan v. Shah Bano Begum case sparked outrage among conservative Muslim groups, who argued that it interfered with Muslim Personal Law. Facing political pressure, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s Congress (INC) government passed the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986, effectively nullifying the judgment and restoring the community’s personal law autonomy. This move was seen as an attempt to appease conservative Muslim leaders but drew widespread criticism for undermining women’s rights and judicial independence. The case ignited national debate on secularism, minority rights, and the need for a uniform civil code.

‘Haq’ is set to release on November 7, 2025.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Interesting perspective from Emraan. Actors should indeed challenge themselves with roles that make them uncomfortable. That's where real growth happens in cinema.
S
Sarah B
The Shah Bano case still feels relevant today. It's disappointing how political pressure overturned a progressive Supreme Court judgment. Hope this film does justice to the complexity.
A
Arjun K
While I appreciate Emraan's acting skills, I'm concerned about how sensitively they'll handle such a delicate topic. The Shah Bano case involves real people's lives and religious sentiments. Hope they don't sensationalize it for box office.
K
Kavya N
This case highlights why we need Uniform Civil Code in India. Personal laws shouldn't override fundamental rights of women. Better late than never that someone is making a film on this! 👏
M
Michael C
As someone who studied this case in law school, I'm curious to see how they portray the legal arguments and political drama. The 1986 Act was indeed a setback for women's rights in India.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50