Fahad Mustafa is heading somewhere much darker than his usual big-screen territory. The first poster and teaser for Zombeid have landed, introducing a zombie thriller starring Mustafa alongside Mehwish Hayat, with the film set for an Eidul Azha 2026 release. The project is being presented by Filmwala Pictures, directed by Nabeel Qureshi, and produced by Fizza Ali Meerza.
The early material leans hard into panic, bloodshed and collapse. In the teaser, the mood is grim from the outset, with images of chaos, snarling infected figures and a city that seems to be slipping out of control. One of the main selling points, really, is that this doesn’t look like the kind of polished romance-or-comedy lane Pakistani mainstream cinema usually stays in. It’s messier, louder, more physical. And that’s clearly the point.
Filmwala’s official teaser positions Zombeid as a “genre-bending” experience and ties the story to a world in collapse, asking whether people will “sacrifice or survive.” Dawn’s Images, meanwhile, described it as gruesome and noted the film is being touted as Pakistan’s first-ever zombie thriller — a phrase that’s likely to become part of the film’s marketing push in the months ahead.
For Mustafa and Hayat, the film also carries reunion value. Pakistani outlets covering the launch have framed Zombeid as another collaboration between the two stars and the Nabeel Qureshi-Fizza Ali Meerza team, a combination that already has a commercial history with audiences. That familiarity may help the film, but the hook this time is obvious: same star power, completely different mood.
That’s probably why the poster drop has drawn attention so quickly. Mustafa, who is often associated with crowd-pleasing, high-energy roles, is being sold here in a harsher, survival-driven setting. Hayat, too, appears to be stepping into a film built less around glamour and more around threat, motion and fear. The teaser hints at action-heavy set pieces, a virus-apocalypse atmosphere, and a local horror texture that producers seem eager to brand as something fresh for Pakistani cinema.
There is, though, a small note of caution in the surrounding coverage: some reports have carried conflicting details about the creative credits. The official Filmwala teaser names Nabeel Qureshi as director and Fizza Ali Meerza as producer, so that remains the strongest available attribution.
For now, Zombeid looks like a calculated swing at a genre local filmmakers have mostly avoided in the mainstream. Whether it turns into a real breakthrough or just a curiosity will depend on what comes after the teaser. But as a first look, it does its job. It feels feverish, commercial, and a bit unhinged. Which, honestly, is exactly what a zombie film should feel like.
