Mahdi Ahmed

Scripting waves of imagination from the sunny side of the Maldives.

Posts tagged ‘2025’

THE YEAR ENDED IN SILENCE

Before anything else, 2025 asked for silence.

On 30th December 2025, the industry lost Abdul Faththaah—producer, director, and one of the quiet pillars of Maldivian cinema.

Some losses announce themselves with chaos. This one arrived like a power cut. No warning. No drama. Just the sudden absence of light. You keep standing in the same room, touching the same walls, but something essential is gone.

May Allah grant Fatthaah eternal peace.

His passing drained the end of the year of its usual noise. Celebration felt misplaced. Reflection became unavoidable. Silence felt earned. It was a reminder—too sharp, too final—that time does not wait for postponed calls, delayed meetings, or films we casually assume we will make “one day.”

As the calendar turned, the new year began on another quiet, heavy note. News came that a fellow legend of our film industry had been taken to the ICU, his condition critical. It was a sobering reminder that even as time moves forward, fragility moves with it. I pray for his recovery—for strength, mercy, and a return to light.

I begin this reflection here because anything else would feel dishonest.

Some years arrive with applause.

This one lowered its voice first.

I didn’t shout much last year.

But I wrote. And that, for me, is the loudest thing.

2025 was not about one big film, one viral moment, or one shiny headline. It was about showing up to the page—again and again—even when life, health scares, deadlines, family responsibilities, and plain old fatigue tried to steal the chair from under me.

Last year, I completed multiple screenplays. Some long. Some short. Some painfully intimate. Some deceptively simple. A few made me laugh while writing. A few made me stop and stare at the wall for longer than I care to admit.

What changed last year was intent.

I found myself writing more quietly—but with sharper clarity. Less noise. Fewer clever tricks. More listening. More restraint. I trusted pauses. I trusted silence. I trusted children’s voices to carry adult pain. I trusted emotion without explaining it to death.

I also noticed something else:

I no longer wrote to prove anything.

After three decades in this industry, that feels like progress.

Some stories last year leaned into family—fragile homes held together by routine, love, and denial. Some explored absence, illness, addiction, separation, memory. Some surprised me by becoming lighter than planned, as if the characters themselves needed a laugh before the storm.

I let them have it.

I also pushed myself formally—structure, rhythm, economy. I trimmed indulgence. I fought the urge to overwrite. I allowed scenes to breathe, and when they refused, I let them suffocate honestly. That mattered.

Not everything I wrote last year was made.

That’s fine.

A screenplay doesn’t fail because it waits. Some of them are just resting.

Personally, 2025 reminded me why I started writing in the first place—not for awards, not for validation, not even for release days—but because writing helps me remember what time does to us, and what we try to protect while it does its work.

And then, quietly—almost politely—Kamanaa walked into the room with a reminder.

On 28th December 2025, at the 5th Karnatakaa International Film Festival, the film was honoured with Best Director for Hussain Munawwar, Best Actor for Yousuf Shafeeu, and Best Actress for Mariyam Azza.

No fireworks. No victory laps. Just that calm, grounding moment when you realise the quiet work was heard.

Kamanaa was written in the same spirit that defined my year—restraint over noise, emotion over explanation, trust over tricks. Watching it travel, and watching its director and actors be recognised for carrying that honesty, felt less like a win and more like a gentle nod from the universe: keep going.

Awards don’t change why I write. But they do remind me that silence, when shaped well, can travel far.

And that’s a good way to end a year.

Looking ahead to 2026, I don’t feel excitement as much as I feel awareness.

Time feels closer now. Louder, even in silence.

There are stories waiting—some unfinished, some only half-formed—but I’m more conscious than ever that writing them is not guaranteed. It is borrowed time. A privilege that can disappear without announcement.

I hope to write with more courage, yes—but also with more urgency. To make fewer assumptions about tomorrows. To finish conversations while they are still possible. To leave less unsaid on the page and off it.

2025 didn’t end with closure. It ended with a pause.

And perhaps that is what it offered me: the reminder that silence is not empty— it is time passing.

I step into the new year carrying that knowledge.

Quieter.

More careful.

Still writing.

Onward.

Happy New Year!

TURNING PAIN INTO ART

I’m thrilled to announce that I’ve just wrapped up my latest screenplay, my first project of 2025—a journey that has been as emotionally taxing as it has been creatively liberating. This new film is a follow-up to Kamanaa, last year’s mega blockbuster, and I’m excited to be pairing once again with producer/ director, Hussain Munawwaru—our fourth collaboration together. Production is set to kick off in early April, and I can hardly wait to see our shared vision come to life on screen.

This screenplay is loosely based on a National Award-winning Dhivehi novel inspired by true events. Without giving away any spoilers, I can share that this film follows the remarkable journey of a resilient protagonist—a tale of survival, redemption, and finding hope amid life’s deepest sorrows.

In writing this screenplay, I dove into the raw, unfiltered depths of human emotion. I explored the painful echoes of a troubled past, the agony of loss, and the slow, often painful road toward healing. Every page challenged me to confront the complexities of the human spirit and its capacity to endure, even when burdened by unbearable weight. There were moments when the emotional toll felt almost overwhelming, yet every tear shed in the creative process became a tribute to the strength that emerges when vulnerability is embraced.

I hope this screenplay jolts audiences awake, exposing the raw, horrifying truths of our society that too many have tried to bury.

Stay tuned for more updates as we approach the start of production in April.

Cheers!

2024: TRIUMPHS, TWISTS AND TALES

If 2024 were a screenplay, it would be a genre-defying blockbuster—a mix of heartfelt drama, laugh-out-loud comedy, and plot twists worthy of Tarantino himself. It had highs, lows, and moments so surreal they felt scripted. And let’s not forget the standout cast of characters who made it unforgettable.

First up, my family—my homegrown, award-winning ensemble cast. My wife, the muse of all muses and queen of feedback (and my heart), hit a milestone birthday this year. I won’t reveal her age—lest I end up sleeping on the balcony with her bougainvilleas. We also celebrated 20 years of marriage—two decades of travel, love, and spirited debates over soft-shell versus cut crab. (Pro tip: always double-check the shopping list.) She’s the mastermind behind her bougainvillea-parenting initiative, tolerates my hair experiments with Batana oil (still no miracles), and joins me in face-mask selfie sessions.

Then there’s Kokko, our 13-year-old whirlwind of energy. Alhamdulillahi, this kid had an incredible year! He juggled school, basketball, and soccer like a pro while I balanced ferry rides, script deadlines, and debated whether to charge him for taxi services. Watching him clatter away on Instagram with my phone during commutes has become a quiet joy—a moment of calm amidst the chaos. And when he solves the crossword faster than I can, I wonder if he’s auditioning to be the lead in my life’s next chapter. Fist bump!

The real showstopper? Kokko brought home not one but two golds this year. His team clinched the Plate Championship in the International Junior Soccer Tournament U14 held in KL, Malaysia, and his school triumphed in the U13 Inter-School Basketball Tournament. Watching him play felt like the climax of a sports movie—sweat, grit, victory, and me in the stands, trying not to ugly cry.

Professionally, 2024 was a whirlwind. Kamanaa, my latest blockbuster, proved that a well-told story can captivate audiences. Behind the scenes, a difference in perspectives over the worth of “words on screen” served as a quiet reminder of the nuances in creative partnerships. Lessons learned, dignity preserved, and the audience’s cheers were far louder than any quiet undervaluation.

And then came Roboman: The Movie—my personal redemption arc. A clean, family-friendly flick, it proved I could leave behind my infamous double entendres and still deliver a hit. Watching it with Kokko and seeing him predict the ending before the climax? Pure gold—as a writer and a dad.

Another standout moment of 2024 was winning Best Screenplay for the MNU drama Manaal at the NCA Officer Teledrama Competition. It was humbling to see my work recognized after a long hiatus. Manaal, a story about familial bonding and women’s empowerment, explored themes close to my heart. The award was a reminder that storytelling, when done with sincerity, resonates deeply—and moments like this make the countless late nights at the keyboard worth it.

Creatively, I dove into a new story in late December, carrying me into the New Year with fresh energy and ambition. This project feels raw, emotional, and layered, pushing me to explore uncharted storytelling territory. Outlining will be both challenging and cathartic, and I’m hoping this script sets the tone for a year of creativity and growth in 2025.

2024 wasn’t just about writing stories; it was about living them. From Kokko’s victories to celebrating two decades of marriage, this year reminded me that life’s best plots aren’t planned—they’re the unexpected twists that shape us.

Oh, and a special shoutout to February 2024—the month my jaw got rearranged. Yes, ouch—it still hurts. Life, as always, leaves its marks in the most unexpected ways.

As the curtain falls on 2024, I’m reminded that life, like a good script, thrives on twists, growth, and moments of brilliance—planned or otherwise. If 2024 taught me anything, it’s that the best stories are written not just with ink, but with courage, resilience, and a sprinkle of chaos.

So here’s to 2025: a fresh page, a new act, and countless opportunities to turn life’s plot twists into masterpieces. And remember, if life hands you a messy first draft, don’t be afraid to rewrite—or stretch a little, especially if screenwriting has you flirting with tennis elbow.

Happy New Year, everyone!