By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
BGTNBGTNBGTN
  • Home
  • TV Channels
  • Video Library
  • Weather
  • BRICS
    • B – Brasil
    • R – Россия (Rossiya)
    • I – भारत (Bhārat)
    • C – 中国 (Zhōngguó)
    • S – South Africa
    • BRICS Plus
      • A – Argentina
      • E – مصر (Misr)
      • E – ኢትዮጵያ (Ityop’iya)
      • I – ایران (Irān)
      • S – السعودية (Al-Su’udiyya)
      • U – الإمارات العربية المتحدة
    • BRICS Partner States
      • A – الجزائر
      • B – Bolivia
      • B – Беларусь
      • C – Cuba
      • K – Қазақстан
      • I – Indonesia
      • M – Malaysia
      • N – Nigeria
      • T – ประเทศไทย
      • T – Türkiye
      • U – Uganda
      • U – Oʻzbekiston
      • V – Việt Nam
  • Sports
  • International
  • Features
    • Hearts and Plates
    • Saudi Vision 2030
    • Business and Finance
    • Technology and Trends
    • Arts and Culture
    • Health and Lifestyle
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Travel and Exploration
    • BGTN Cares
Reading: Crushin’ on Netflix’s Crashing Eid, why the mini-series epitomises brown culture with painful accuracy
Share
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
BGTNBGTN
  • Brasil
  • Россия (Rossiya)
  • भारत (Bhārat)
  • 中国 (Zhōngguó)
  • South Africa
  • Argentina
  • مصر (Misr)
  • ኢትዮጵያ (Ityop’iya)
  • ایران (Irān)
  • السعودية (Al-Su’udiyya)
  • الإمارات العربية المتحدة
  • الجزائر
  • Bolivia
  • Беларусь
  • Cuba
  • Қазақстан
  • Indonesia
  • Malaysia
  • Nigeria
  • ประเทศไทย
  • Türkiye
  • Uganda
  • Oʻzbekiston
  • Việt Nam
  • Home
  • TV Channels
  • Video Library
  • Weather
  • BRICS
    • B – Brasil
    • R – Россия (Rossiya)
    • I – भारत (Bhārat)
    • C – 中国 (Zhōngguó)
    • S – South Africa
    • BRICS Plus
    • BRICS Partner States
  • Sports
  • International
  • Features
    • Hearts and Plates
    • Saudi Vision 2030
    • Business and Finance
    • Technology and Trends
    • Arts and Culture
    • Health and Lifestyle
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Travel and Exploration
    • BGTN Cares
Follow US
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
© 2024 BRICS Global Television Network. Newshound Media. All Rights Reserved.
BGTN > Lifestyle > BRICS Entertainment > Crushin’ on Netflix’s Crashing Eid, why the mini-series epitomises brown culture with painful accuracy
BRICS Entertainment

Crushin’ on Netflix’s Crashing Eid, why the mini-series epitomises brown culture with painful accuracy

BGTN Reporter
Last updated: December 1, 2023 1:18 pm
By BGTN Reporter
4 Min Read
Share
Crashing Eid, A Netflix four part mini series.
Photo: Screengrab
SHARE

Netflix’s Crashing Eid is a beautiful, intricately woven tapestry of stories that epitomise brown culture to the letter: the good, the bad and the judgmental.

Contents
Razan and SameerWATCH: Netflix’s Crashing Eid, the trailerMother-daughter dynamics and navigating divorce

Crashing Eid starts with two seemingly doomed, culturally crossed lovers: London-born Pakistani Sameer and Saudi Arabian Razan. Razan and Sameer meet when Razan worked as an academic researcher at an unknown University in London.

Like any series, you have to weather the first episode – the set-up for the story. It’s easy to dismiss it as a typical, English-language dubbed, and predictable love story.

I didn’t expect the refreshing take on modern Saudi Arabia, the blended family dynamic, navigating two cultures with awkward racial nuances that mixed-race couples often endure in their relationships.

ALSO WATCH: Eminem, Mike Tyson, and Christiano Ronaldo rub shoulders at Saudi’s ‘Battle of the Baddest’

Razan and Sameer

Razan is an unapologetic alpha female, the black sheep among 50 shades of brown. She is a divorcee after an arranged marriage with her cousin didn’t end well. We learn later in the series why she fled to London post-divorce.

Sameer was born to Pakistani immigrants in London and is just the right animal for Razan. He is a man obviously smitten, although why he didn’t propose first is a mystery all women would like to uncover, so the jury is still out on that one.

He comes across as excited by Razan’s bold sense of independence and possesses a sweet disposition and temperament that can calm his fiery girlfriend. Also irresistible is the way Sameer becomes the dad who steps up to father a teenage girl.

The main storyline is about how the culturally crossed lovers bridge the differences with their respective families.

The awkward, cringe-worthy racial undertone about him being Pakistani and perhaps of lower class pepper the entire mini-series.

ALSO READ: Netflix’s heartwrenching movie about migration, ‘Nowhere,’ is a firm favourite in BRICS countries

WATCH: Netflix’s Crashing Eid, the trailer

Mother-daughter dynamics and navigating divorce

One thing that stuck out for me was that this series is based on a typical middle-class Saudi family. But Saudi’s version of the middle class looks way more economically empowered than the level of the middle class we see reflected across its BRICS counterparts.

Crashing Eid showcased beautiful Saudi properties with ample kitchen, dining and living space complete with a pool. In South Africa, the middle class is a two-income household in a matchbox, and a pool is an item of luxury.

But enough about how Saudi’s middle class outshines us; I found the fearless storytelling about divorce and blended family social dynamics particularly refreshing.

Razan’s mother is your typical brown mum who loves her children so much that no one outside the family will ever be good enough for her daughter. That mother-daughter dynamic is put through the wringer when Razan’s mother has to mend the fence with her own sister after their children’s divorce.

The show also touches on how it was perfectly acceptable for Razan’s ex-husband to remarry and have children, while Razan’s choices are nitpicked through the racially limiting lens of prejudice and social construct.

We also see the painful experiences children navigate when their parents split. Razan’s teenage daughter Lamar finds herself ostracised by her heavily religious father, who disapproves of his ex-wife’s modern approach to Muslim tradition.

Lamar also transcends from blaming her mother for the divorce to empathising with her parent’s marriage struggles and reconciling how the new partners complement her parents.

Rating 9/10

The architect of South Africa’s biggest financial scandal kills himself
2023 Cricket world cup in India fails to draw crowds
Brazil’s plans to drill for oil hits resistance from indigenous Amazon communities
WATCH: ‘Sunak can have a one-on-one fight with Putin,’ Britons say they don’t want war with Russia
BRICS overtakes G7 in GDP figures
TAGGED:Crashing EidEditor's PickNetflix
Share This Article
Facebook Flipboard Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit VKontakte Telegram Threads Email Copy Link Print
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Surprise0
Shy0
Joy0
Cry0
Embarrass0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article UN Global stocktake report WATCH: United Nations global stocktake reveals global warming commitments falling short
Next Article A Qatar Airways flight pases above a road sign as it prepares to land at Heathrow airport in west London on June 8, 2020. Spanish infrastructure giant Ferrovial announced it is offloading its remaining 25 percent stake in London's Heathrow Airport to a French private equity group and Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund. After owning the UK travel hub for 17 years, Ferrovial said on November 29, 2023, it had reached a 2.37 billion pound ($3.01 billion) deal with Paris-based Ardian and Riyahd's Public Investment Fund (PIF). Saudi wealth fund scoops up 10% of London Heathrow airport
2 Comments
  • mLPZbBzyhE says:
    December 23, 2023 at 9:55 am

    NVAieqdY

    Reply
  • xmhXWFprKjw says:
    December 23, 2023 at 9:55 am

    RIaDGhcC

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
PinterestPin
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
ThreadsFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

Latest News

Introducing South Africa’s G20 Signature Story!
BRICS South Africa
Healing Streams Live Healing Services With Pastor Chris
International
Cas Coovadia, B20 South Africa Sherpa 2025
The Global South is Rewriting the Rules and Africa Must Take Its Place at the Table
BRICS South Africa
Mr Cas Coovadia
South Africa’s B20 Sherpa Cas Coovadia Charts Path for Inclusive Global Growth
BRICS South Africa

You Might Also Like

الإمارات العربية المتحدةInternational

Unprecedented storms cause catastrophic flooding in Dubai and Oman

April 19, 2024
Team of Talented Young Arab Professionals Working in a Technological Research and Development Agency. Computer Screens with Software Code and Technical Neural Network Diagrams in Muslim Office stock photo
Technology and Trends

Saudi Center for AI Research and Ethics Granted UNESCO Status

December 1, 2023
International

Global powers issue travel warnings amid escalating Israel-Iran tensions

April 16, 2024
Sports

South African Rugby team’s glorious return home after thrilling fourth Rugby World Cup victory

November 1, 2023

Our Partners

Ad imageAd image

Learn About BRICS

  • B – Brasil
  • R – Россия (Rossiya)
  • I – भारत (Bhārat)
  • C – 中国 (Zhōngguó)
  • S – South Africa
  • Saudi Vision 2030

Our World

  • Support Centre
  • Career
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Google Translate

BGTNBGTN
Follow US
© 2025 BRICS Global Television Network (Pty) Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Independent Media Platform. Unauthorized ownership claims or affiliations are unlawful.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up