Monday, October 01, 2007

iran: a cinematographic revolution



this was a very good documentary on the history of iranian cinema (along with the history of revolution) which became an international phenomenon since the 70s. two interesting things:
1- abbas kiorostami was not in the interviews.
2- iranian cinema and culture before the revolution was really similar to the turkish.

overall i can't say that iranian cinema is one of my favorite national cinemas, i find that child, everyday reality, old man, nature themes a bit boring and repetitive.

2 Comments:

Blogger Cesar Fernandez D said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

5:37 PM  
Blogger Cesar Fernandez D said...

Nader Homayoun's documentary which I have seen on the European art channel ARTE presents a historical view of a cinematographic school that has amazed in the last few years the movie fans all over the globe presented on the background of the last half century of history of Iran. Although some of the major and better known films of the Iranian cinema are missing from this review the historical value and the interest of the documentary is kept high by this parallelism of cinema and history. It is really surprising and probably novelty for the majority of film fans to learn about the school of cinema that developed in Iran in the late 60s and the 70s - a school mature and diverse in the means of expression, socially engaged and adding its voice to the protests that led to the fall of the Shah. The tone and style changes with the Islamic revolution, which changed the rules of the artistic expression, cenzorship and social engagement of the artists as many revolutions do. The role of the Iranian cinema in the war between Iran and Iraq is also presented in details. The documentary part includes well selected excepts and interviews with some of the important directors of the period. doctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctordoctorAlthough film lovers who would be interested more in the aesthetics risk to be disappointed, the documentary value exceeds the expectations and makes the film worth seeing.

5:38 PM  

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