How To Hide It, co-written and directed by Ramla Ali and Richard A. Moore, is a charming comedy-drama that takes a simple lottery-winning premise and flips it on its head. Most stories about sudden wealth focus on excitement, luxury, and wish fulfillment. This short takes the opposite approach, exploring what happens when winning the jackpot becomes the source of a personal crisis. Set in East London, the film balances humor and sincerity while examining themes of faith, guilt, family expectations, and personal identity.
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The story follows Zahra Ahmed, a young woman struggling with the fallout of a failed engagement and feeling stuck in a routine life. After a moment of weakness, she buys a lottery ticket despite believing gambling is forbidden by her faith. What should have been an insignificant act suddenly turns life-changing when she wins an astonishing £184 million jackpot. While everyone around her sees the money as a miracle, Zahra sees it as a problem. Convinced that her fortune stems from a religious transgression, she becomes trapped between financial freedom and overwhelming guilt, leading to a series of increasingly awkward and amusing situations.
What I enjoyed most about the film is its central concept. Zahra is presented as someone who takes her faith seriously, constantly worries about doing the wrong thing, and tends to overthink every decision. The irony of a person like that finally giving in to temptation and immediately winning the lottery creates a wonderfully comedic setup. More importantly, the film never treats her concerns as a joke. Instead, it allows the audience to understand why this seemingly incredible event feels so complicated to her.
Ramla Ali delivers an excellent performance as Zahra. She captures the character’s anxiety, frustration, and internal conflict with a natural charm that makes her easy to root for. Equally entertaining is Umar Sadiq as Danny, Zahra’s coworker and closest confidant. Acting as both a cheerleader and source of mischief, Danny brings a lot of energy to the film and shares an enjoyable dynamic with Zahra throughout.
The film is also visually impressive. Cinematographer Jasper Enujuba gives the short a textured, cinematic look with rich colors and subtle grain that enhance its atmosphere. The convenience store setting is particularly effective, creating a slightly cramped environment that mirrors Zahra’s emotional state and reinforces the feeling that she is trapped between different worlds and expectations.
Overall, How To Hide It is a funny, thoughtful, and engaging short that finds humor in a genuinely relatable moral dilemma. Supported by strong performances, confident direction, and a clever premise, the film successfully turns a lottery fantasy into an entertaining exploration of faith, guilt, and self-discovery.
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