Bestselling Pakistani novel to be made into an Indian movie

Updated 10 April 2015
Follow

Bestselling Pakistani novel to be made into an Indian movie

MUMBAI: Renowned Pakistani novel “Karachi You’re Killing Me,” written by journalist Saba Imtiaz is soon to become a Hindi film, the Express Tribune reported.
Makers of the upcoming Bollywood movie, Airlift, have bought film rights from the young journalist and plan on putting the project to work by the end of this year. The novel, which centers on Ayesha Khan, a journalist, and chronicles her life in Karachi, is a Bridget Jones’s Diary meets the Diary of a Social Butterfly, “a comedy of manners in a city with none,” as Saba describes it.
The author will be working closely with the production team to help develop the film. However, the makers are planning to revise the novel to fit an Indian context. “It’s tentatively called “Delhi, You’re Killing Me” and will be entirely set in the Old Delhi environment. The hunt for a young female actress to play Ayesha is currently on,” said a source close to the development.
In an interview with Mumbai Mirror, Malhotra could hardly contain his excitement, “The story excited me just the way Queen had when Vikas Bahl had first narrated it to me.”
The book, which became a roaring success upon its release, illustrates the life of a progressive-thinking journalist in her late twenties putting her modern attitude in contrast to the city’s orthodox elements.


Passengers flee snake at Australian train station

Updated 02 February 2026
Follow

Passengers flee snake at Australian train station

  • Footage showed the small serpent wriggling down the platform in the city of Sydney on Sunday night

Commuters jumped in fright as a snake slithered across a city train platform in Australia, proving nowhere is safe from the nation’s creepy-crawlies.
Footage showed the small serpent wriggling down the platform in the city of Sydney on Sunday night.
One woman abandons her bike after spotting the snake and flees in the opposite direction, while other passengers anxiously huddle together on the platform.
The impasse is solved when one passenger plucks up the courage to hoist the snake by its tail and drop it over the hand railing.
“A passenger who got off a train took it upon himself to handle the intruder,” said government agency Transport for New South Wales, adding that “the man did not flinch.”