Iran

  • Hana Makhmalbaf – Ruzha-ye Sabz AKA Green Days (2009)

    2001-2010DocumentaryHana MakhmalbafIranPolitics

    Ava, an Iranian woman suffering from depression, blames recent political events in Iran for her troubled mental state and goes to a psychologist. The psychologist advises her to take on physical work, and later, to work on a play. However, the play, inspired by the reality and problems of her society, is banned. It is election time. The city is alive with possibilities. A new wave of hope has sent people massing into the streets to participate, to vote against the current president. Everywhere there is singing, dancing, action— a vibrant, passionate vision of a very different future for her country. But Ava still doesn’t believe change will come. She leaves her home and talks to people in the streets, trying desperately to rekindle her own hope.

    The film is part documentary, part fiction.Read More »

  • Manijeh Hekmat – Bandar Band (2020)

    2011-2020DramaIranManijeh HekmatMusical

    Quote:
    After a long time, some Iranian women singers are going to enter an unofficial competition in a coffee shop in Tehran. Pregnant Mahla along with the other members of Bandar Band, her husband and one of their closest friends, starts her journey to Tehran from a southern province just when they have lost all they had in the flood. They still keep their hopes alive, however every road they take leads to a dead-end in a flood-stricken land. They intend to go to Tehran, but they wonder if it is just another turn around a vicious circle. —Anonymous from IMDBRead More »

  • Mohammad Rasoulof – Gagooman AKA The Twilight (2002)

    2001-2010ArthouseDramaIranMohammad Rasoulof

    Plainly but nonetheless effectively handled, “The Twilight” relates a case of prison recidivism with the real-life subjects playing themselves. Chance to glimpse incarceration and ex-con life in Iran will hold attention for foreign viewers, though this very modest, earnest exercise in old-school social problem cinema ultimately proves that the related issues are pretty much the same the world over. Fest and educational play are signaled.Read More »

  • Maryam Moghadam & Behtash Sanaeeha – Ghasideyeh gave sefid AKA Ballad of a White Cow (2020)

    Drama2011-2020Behtash SanaeehaIranMaryam Moghadam

    Quote:
    Mina’s life is turned upside down when she learns that her husband was innocent of the crime for which he was executed, so she starts a silent battle against a cynical system for her own and her daughter’s sakeRead More »

  • Samira Makhmalbaf – Panj é asr AKA At Five In The Afternoon (2003)

    2001-2010DramaIranSamira Makhmalbaf

    Quote:
    In the bombed-out ruins of post-Taliban Kabul, Noqreh (Agheleh Rezaie) lives with her conservative father (Abdolgani Yousefrazi) and her sister-in-law, Leylomah (Marzieh Amiri), in temporary refuge buildings. Although her father insists that she go to the religious school, Noqreh sneaks into a secular school for girls. Her teacher encourages her to run for class president, and she finds support from a refugee poet (Razi Mahebi), who introduces her to the work of Garcia Lorca. Noqreh dreams about becoming president of Afghanistan, and she bases her political ideals on former Pakistani president Benazir Bhutto.Read More »

  • Ali Ahmadzade – Madar-e ghalb atomi AKA Atomic Heart Mother (2015)

    2011-2020Ali AhmadzadeDramaFantasyIran

    On their way back from a wild party, Arineh and Nobahar cause a car accident. A mysterious stranger by the name of Toofan offers to cover the costs. This won’t be the last time they’ll cross his path over the course of the night. Cars form a popular setting in Iranian cinema. They move through the public sphere, yet their occupants remain among themselves. But what happens if a policeman suddenly gets into your vehicle, finds black market DVDs and forces you to admit, tipsily, that Argo is a film hostile to Iran? This road movie through Tehran by night begins as a hyperactive, drugged-up farce that pokes fun at the authorities, interprets the cultural history of Western toilets, and postulates other daring intercultural theories. Yet gradually the atmosphere changes and tension steadily rises in the car, thanks to Toofan, who keeps appearing again and again out of the blue. He plays a diabolical game with the two friends, one that crosses the boundaries into the metaphysical realm. As fanciful and spooky as the plot may seem, it is clearly anchored in Iran’s present.Read More »

  • Mohammad Reza Kheradmandan – Gharar Panjshanbeh AKA Thursday Appointment (2019)

    2011-2020IranMohammad Reza KheradmandanShort Film

    Quote
    A beautifully moving story of an old man driving in the busy streets of Tehran. At the traffic lights he notices a young girl who is sad in the back seat of her parent’s car, they are too busy arguing. Old man intervenes and give’s his wife’s flowers to the young couple to stop them from arguing. We only realise how important those flowers were to the old man when he drives off.Read More »

  • Asghar Farhadi – Ghahreman AKA A Hero (2021)

    Asghar Farhadi2021-2030DramaIranThriller

    Quote:
    Rahim is in prison because of a debt he was unable to repay. During a two-day leave, he tries to convince his creditor to withdraw his complaint against the payment of part of the sum. But things don’t go as planned.Read More »

  • Shirin Neshat – Tooba (2002)

    Shirin Neshat2001-2010IranShort FilmVideo Art

    Quote:
    Her poetic two-channel video installation Tooba is based on the Koran, in which Tooba, the sacred tree of paradise, offers shelter and sustenance to those in need. Neshat’s video places a woman within a groove in the trunk of a large fig tree, symbolising its soul. They stand, alone, in a stone-walled garden set in a mountainous landscape. Men and women draw near and enter the enclosure, seeking refuge, as the Tooba-woman disappears into the Tooba-tree. The piece is ambiguous. Who has agency? Is it the crowd, who ‘invade’ the garden or the tree-woman who draws them towards her like a magnet? Tooba is dedicated to Iranian writer Shahrnush Parsipour, whose novel Women without Men concerns five women sojourning in a garden, one of whom is transformed into a tree.Read More »

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