The teaser for Luv Di Saun, starring Farhan Saeed and Mamya Shajaffar, is finally out, giving audiences their first proper look at what’s being billed as an intense action-romance set in the heart of Old Lahore. The film is being promoted for a worldwide Eid ul Azha 2026 release, with ARY’s official teaser copy framing the story as one shaped by love, chaos and consequences.
The newly released teaser leans into a gritty, cinematic tone. Farhan Saeed is seen moving through Lahore’s narrow inner-city streets, including shots on a Royal Enfield motorcycle with Mamya Shajaffar, while the visuals swing between romance, confrontation and street-level action. The Express Tribune’s report says the teaser presents “an intense and unconventional love story,” while the official teaser description suggests the film asks how far someone can go for love when that love is pushed to a breaking point.
One of the teaser’s strongest hooks is its dialogue. In coverage of the release, Farhan’s voiceover includes the line, “They say love changes a man; mine destroyed me,” setting the mood for a story that doesn’t appear interested in a soft, breezy romance. Instead, the promo points to something rougher and more emotionally charged, with action beats woven into the love story rather than tacked on around it.
The film is directed by Imran Malik. Reporting on the teaser also names Mehrunnisa Iqbal, Rana Ejaz, Babar Ali and Tabrez Khan among the supporting cast, suggesting Luv Di Saun is being positioned as a fairly broad commercial release rather than a two-character romance. The pairing is notable too: Tribune reported that this marks Farhan Saeed and Mamya Shajaffar’s first big-screen collaboration, even though viewers have seen them share screen space before in television.
What’s interesting is the way the film is being sold. The teaser campaign isn’t pushing a typical glossy rom-com feel. ARY’s promotional language describes a story caught between “chaos, choices, and consequences,” while outside coverage has highlighted the film’s blend of emotional intensity, action and Lahore’s old-city atmosphere. That gives Luv Di Saun a slightly more rugged identity than many recent mainstream romance-led Pakistani film promotions.
With Eid releases usually carrying high box-office expectations, Luv Di Saun now enters the conversation as one of the Pakistani titles to watch in the festive window. For now, the teaser’s job is simple: create curiosity. On that front, it does enough. It gives Farhan Saeed a darker, more physical screen presence, presents Mamya Shajaffar as central to the emotional stakes, and leaves just enough mystery behind the story to keep audiences waiting for a full trailer.
