Iranian Cinema is Making a Splash at Venice Film Festival

09/8/09  Print This Post Print This Post    No Comments   Popular   Written by Kate Sedgwick
    Share
According to Variety, no less than three Iranian films have been selected for the Venice Film Festival, already underway.

Photo and Feature Photo: seier+seier+seier

From Variety’s Ali Jafar:

While Iranian cinema was preoccupied for much of the 1980s and 1990s with symbolism and allegorically cherubic children, the Iranian pics at Venice this year deal directly with the social upheaval in the country both preceding and following June’s presidential elections.

There are at least two women directors out of Iran this year at the festival,Hana Makhmalbaf and Shirin Neshat. Shirin Neshat’s debut “Women Without Men” is set in the early ’50’s during an American government sponsored upheaval and traces the lives of four women seeking personal peace in the time leading up to the revolution of 1979.

In the Variety article, Neshat says of the film and her work:

It’s important for Western audiences to know about the events of 1953 and how that led to the 1979 revolution and the events we saw in June.

We are seeing history repeating itself, only the players have changed. Instead of the shah we now have supreme leader Ali Khamenei and Mahmoud Ahmedinejad.

What is the same is seeing the Iranian people trying to free themselves from attempts to take away their liberty.

Hana Makhmalbaf’s docudrama “Green Days” mixes actual and staged footage to create a portrait of a woman in the aftermath of Iran’s most recent elections. The director is just 21 years old.

The other film mentioned in the article is Nader Takmil Homayoun’s “Tehroun.” Homayoun splits his time between France and Iran and his film exposes a seedy underbelly in a statement about the disenfranchised youth of the country.

These films were created very quickly, but if these selections are any indication, we should be seeing some strong films coming out of Iran in years to come with a new perspective of world politics informing filmmakers’ sensibilities.

Community Connection

Interested in what else is going on in Iran? Check in with Matador expert Jason Rezaian in this Matador Trips article.

Looking for one or two more reasons to go to Iran to seal the deal in your head? See Jason’s article 7 Reasons To Travel To Iran NOW.


    Share

About the Author

Matador ID: K_Crimini

Kate Sedgwick co-edits Matador Nights from Buenos Aires where she teaches English, learns Spanish and thoroughly enjoys herself. Her art and writing have appeared in print and on-line publications and her novel in progress will be received with prurient glee by critics of American culture if it ever gets into their grubby little hands. Find out more about her than you ever wanted to know here. (Author photo by Sebastian Santana).

Leave a Comment

Get Matador in your inbox and around the web.

Sign up for our FREE weekly newsletter.


View full list of RSS feeds

Jump To Category:



Explore the Community



Popular Stories on Matador

Photo Essay: People Watching in Verdi Square, New York City

The comings and goings of people at Verdi Square, in th... 

An Out of Body Experience in the Heart of Gotham

Editor Alex Andrei takes an inner journey in an isolati... 

The Best Taco in Madrid

There were only three filling choices as far as I was c... 

Essential Gear for the Nomadic Travel Photographer

Are you a serious travel photographer constantly on the... 

White Privilege - Can You See it?

When is being "color blind" simply a cop out?... 

Checklist for Writers: 10 Questions to Ask While Editing

10 questions to help when you're

Carbon Footprint of US Junk Mail Equivalent to 480,000 Cars

The average person in the US receives 11 pieces of junk... 

The Ten Ugliest Cars Being Made Right Now

If there is a nuclear apocalypse that wipes out all civ... 

Love in the Time of Matador: Drawing Our Own Ghosts

Angela Tung explains how a Buddhist monk helped her lea... 

Finca Bellavista: The World's First Treehouse Subdivision

With sustainability as a guiding principle, Finca Bella... 



Focus





Editor Blogs