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Jo Chale To Jaan Se Guzar Gaye

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Jo Chale To Jaan Se Guzar Gaye
Title screen
GenreDrama, Romance
Written byMaha Malik
Directed byNadeem Siddiqi
StarringNoman Ijaz
Sami khan
Saba Qamar
Opening themeJo Chale To Jaan Se Guzar Gaye by Waqar Ali
Country of originPakistan
Original languageUrdu
No. of episodes23
Production
ProducersAsif Raza Mir
Babar Javed
Camera setupMulti-camera setup
Running time30-35 minutes
Production companyA&B Entertainment
Original release
NetworkGeo Entertainment
Release19 September 2011 (2011-09-19)

Jo Chale To Jaan Se Guzar Gaye is a Pakistani drama television serial premiered on Geo Entertainment on 19 September 2011. The serial is directed by Nadeem Siddiqi, written by Maha Malik, and produced by Asif Raza Mir & Babar Javed under their banner A&B Entertainment.

Plot

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The story of Jo Chale To Jaan Se Guzar Gaye revolves around Zufishan (Saba Qamar) who is from a middle-class background. She has been engaged to her cousin Azar (Sami Khan) and is strongly in love with him. All of a sudden Sayed Alim Shah (Noman Ijaz) a landlord saw her and fell in love with her. He forced Zufishan to marry him, but she refuses as she is engaged to her cousin.

Sayed Alam Shah kidnapped Azar and blackmail Zufishan to marry him. After all Zufishan decided to marry Sayed Alam Shah and he releases Azar. She did not even tell the whole story to Azar and marry Alam Shah while Azay was out of country. In an accident Alam Shah loses his legs. With the passage of time Zufishan starts loving her husband and story moves on. When Azar gets the real facts about her marriage, he gets shocked and asks Zufishan to get divorce from him but she refuses. At the end, Alam shah suicided by taking poison and azar got Zufishan again.[1]

Cast

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Reception

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In a review by Javaria Farooqui published in DAWN Images in 2022, the reviewer critiqued the portrayal of toxic masculinity in the series.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "JO CHALAY TO JAAN SAY GUZAR GAYE".
  2. ^ InpaperMagazine, From (21 April 2013). "First person: Scent of a woman". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  3. ^ Javaria Farooqui (11 July 2022). "In many Pakistan television dramas, love stories are toxic masculinity and harassment in disguise". DAWN Images.
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External videos
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