'Make it before Bollywood does': Saba Qamar as Anmol Pinky?
Pakistani creator Bilal Hassan sparked a viral debate by pitching Saba Qamar for an on-screen adaptation of the alleged drug dealer Anmol Pinky, urging producers to act fast before Bollywood.

Pakistani social media personality Bilal Hassan, popularly known as Mystapaki, has sparked a fresh wave of entertainment buzz after pitching a bold casting idea that has taken over timelines — with netizens quickly jumping in to echo the demand.
In a video shared on Instagram, he suggested that acclaimed actor Saba Qamar should be cast in a high-voltage on-screen adaptation of the alleged drug dealer character Anmol Pinky, a name already circulating widely in online discourse.
Bilal Hassan didn’t just float the idea casually — he pushed it as a “perfect casting match,” arguing that Saba Qamar’s track record in intense roles makes her an ideal fit for a complex, controversial character.
He specifically referenced her performances in Baaghi and Case No. 9, saying those projects already prove her ability to carry layered, real-life-inspired roles with impact and intensity.
Taking the idea further, he urged local production houses to move quickly on the concept, warning that if they delay, Bollywood could “pick up the story and twist it” before Pakistan gets to it first.
That line — the suggestion to “make it before Bollywood does” — quickly became the most viral takeaway from his video, with users framing it as a race for narrative ownership in South Asian entertainment.
What started as a creator’s casting pitch has now snowballed into a wider online demand, with netizens also backing the idea and amplifying calls for Saba Qamar to take on the role.
Bilal also proposed actor Gohar Rasheed for a key male role, adding that the combination could turn the project into a major hit if executed properly.
He insisted that the story already has strong audience curiosity and claimed that directors and writers are likely already developing versions of it behind the scenes.
Saba Qamar, one of Pakistan’s most decorated actors with a career spanning Baaghi, Maat, Cheekh, and even Bollywood’s Hindi Medium, has not responded to the suggestion.
Her recent psychological thriller Muamma further cemented her reputation for experimental and layered roles, making the casting discussion even more fuel for online debate.
For now, the idea remains purely speculative — but the internet has already turned it into a full-blown casting fantasy war, complete with urgency, rivalry, and viral momentum.
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