<span>As she approached the end of her life </span><span>four years ago, Aisha Ch</span><span>audhary typed some thoughts on her phone as she struggled for breath due to pulmonary fibrosis. For her it was </span><span>cathar</span><span>tic, a way to find some purpose and meaning. For everyone else who read th</span><span>ose notes, she was an inspiration, and </span><span><em>My Little Epiphanies</em></span><span> was published </span><span>by Bloomsbury in 2015 </span><span>– coincidentally and tragically on the </span><span>day before she died. </span><span>Aisha was only 18.</span> <span>Four years later, Shonali Bose </span><span>has gathered together <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/lifestyle/fashion/priyanka-chopra-steps-out-in-a-dubai-designer-for-date-night-with-nick-jonas-1.818995">Priyanka Chopra Jonas</a> and Farhan Akhtar for a film adaptation</span><span> called </span><span><em>The Sky is Pink</em></span><span>. The director</span><span> has form in this area after 201</span><span>4's </span><span><em>Margarita With a Straw</em></span><span>, her excellent </span><span>drama </span><span>about an Indian teenager with cerebral palsy. But </span><span><em>The Sky is Pink</em></span><span> is a very different beast to the book. P</span><span>erhaps with the profile of its leads in mind, this is a romantic film </span><span>that focuses on the relationship between Aisha's parents Aditi (Chopra Jonas) and Niren (Akhtar) </span><span>as they meet, fall in love and realise they carry a gene </span><span>that gives their children a </span><span>good chance of being born with severe combined immune deficiency. It's already taken their first child, but their son Isha</span><span>an (Rohit Suresh Saraf) appears to be</span><span> OK</span><span>. </span><span>Aisha has not been so lucky. She recovers from a bone-marrow transplant</span><span> as a baby, but </span><span>the operation </span><span>leads her to develop </span><span>pulmonary fibrosis in her teenage years. </span> <span><em>The Sky is Pink</em></span><span>'s narrator is Aisha (Zaira Wasim), who brings the strands of the story together non-sequentially and tells us </span><span>10 minutes in that she's dead. "Get over it. It's quite cool actually</span><span>," she tells her parents from the afterlife. "You'll see when you get here</span><span>, which you do know you will, right?</span><span>"</span><span> The tone tells you all you need to know about the gentle, romcom mood here.</span> <span>Still, splitting the </span><span>chronology is </span><span>clever </span><span>because it allows Bose to concentrate on how decisive moments echo </span><span>through the decades. But this structure does, in the end, cause problems</span><span>, </span><span>because its running time of more than two hours means </span><span><em>The Sky is Pink</em></span><span> is far too long</span><span> to maintain the audience's interest in the story of how a relationship copes (or doesn't) with extreme circumstances. </span> <span>For example, there's a quiet moment of reflection in the immediate aftermath of Aisha's death. It's almost a relief that there hasn't been an overwrought end-of-life scene; there's a lot of sentimentality and plaintive music heavily signposting how we should be feeling. But then the </span><span>"family gathered around the deathbed</span><span>" scene actually </span><span>arrives a while later. It's well handled, but there's a nagging feeling after about 90 minutes that there's still a significant amount of extraneous detail to wade through before we'll </span><span>reach a resolution that has already become</span><span> obvious. </span> <span>And it does feel </span><span>as though there is another film here battling to get out, a Hindi take on </span><span><em>Me and Earl and the Dying Girl</em></span><span>, </span><span>perhaps. Certainly </span><span>Wasim (in her last film, apparently) has enough sass and dry wit about her to make her character's short time on Earth feel inspirational, </span><span>while the real-life snippet of Aisha's TedX speech on being happy and living in the moment at the end of the film gives both the screenwriting and Wasim's performance a new credibility. </span> <span>But in <em>The Sky is Pink</em></span><span>, Aisha seems to be inspirational to everyone but the family itself, who generally</span><span> look a bit sad and argue about the best treatment for her. When Aditi is admitted to </span><span>– in the script's words </span><span>– a "mental hospital", it's probably the least convincing moment of the whole film when it should have been its climax</span><span>. Caring for sick children is mentally and physically exhausting yet Chopra Jonas looks as slick and composed as ever. Her executive-producer role might be to answer for that.</span> <span>Perhaps we're being too exacting on a film </span><span>that Chopra Jonas</span><span> says "will surprise the audience in its representation of love in all its forms".</span><span> It's warm, funny in places and has a few dance numbers, </span><span>while Chopra Jonas is </span><span>convincing as Aisha's mother over the piece. The catch in </span><span>Akhtar's voice when he has to go on radio in London and beg for money to treat his daughter is quite something, too.</span> <span>In fact, the London scenes </span><span>are reminiscent </span><span>of Richard Curtis's best </span><span>films</span><span> (</span><span><em>Four Weddings and a Funeral</em></span><span> and </span><span><em>Love Actually</em></span><span>)</span><span> and when the emotional scenes are </span><span>handled well, it's genuinely moving. </span><span>The scene in which </span><span>Niren and Ishaan are weeping, holding each other in a small bed, </span><span>gets right to the heart of grief without recourse to words. </span> <span>If only there could be more of this nuance</span><span>. But it's still a film </span><span>that </span><span>celebrates the incredible effect a thoughtful teenage girl had on her family and the wider world. In that sense, it's a qualified success.</span> <em>The Sky is Pink is in theatres across the UAE from Thursday, October 10</em>