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Abbas Kiarostami – Nema-ye Nazdik AKA Close-Up (1990)

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Quote:
In 1989 in Tehran, a movie mad unemployed printer named Ali Sabzian was arrested for impersonating the famous film director Mohsen Makhmalbaf. The family he had fooled was deep in rehearsals for his next “film” when they alerted authorities of their suspicions. “I loved playing that part,” confesses Sabzian in his trial. When the judge asks the Ahankah family if they will drop the charges in light of Sabzian’s apologies and explanations, one of the sons replies “I get the impression he’s still playing a role.”

These moments from the documented trial resonate through Close-Up, Abbas Kiarostami’s 1989 film of the event. Kairostami, best known to American audiences for Through the Olive Trees and the Cannes Film Festival Palme d’Or winning A Taste of Cherry, read about the story in the papers and convinced Sabzian and the Ahankah family to play themselves in a dramatic recreation. The case itself is hardly sensationalistic. Sabzian met Mrs. Ahankah on a bus and passed himself off as Makhmalbaf (the scene is recreated by the participants in the middle of the film and establishes an unusual bond between the two—when the police come to arrest him in a later recreation she steps up to stop them). It’s simple bit of role playing that Sabzian pushes into an elaborate charade when he proposes that the family act in his next film and becomes a frequent visitor to their house. Intercut with these extended scenes is the documentary record of the real trial (which Kiarostami convinced the judge to let him not only film but in some ways shape for the camera) and a series of on-camera interviews. What emerges isn’t so much a merging of the two forms as an inquiry into the very nature of cinematic representation.

The family suspects Sabzian of casing the house for heist and looking for “investment dollars” for his film (“I really would have shot the film if I had the money,” offers Sabzian in his defense), but the monetary terms their actual loss is limited to a loan of 2,000 tomans. The real damage has been one of trust, of intimacy: Sabzian so insinuated himself with the family that when the police come to take him away Mrs. Ahankah attempts to stop them. In interviews with Kiarostami the sons feel the betrayal while the father plays it cool, insisting to the camera that he was always suspicious. But you have to wonder—is he too now playing a part, that of the in control patriarch, while his sons take up the mantle of outraged victim?

Kiarostami pushes and pulls at our relationship to the screen story. He opens the film with an almost laughably bald bit of exposition as journalist Hossain Farazmand (the reporter who broke the story, playing himself in the recreation) explains the story to a pair of policeman on their way to arrest Sabzian. As the police go in to make the arrest, the camera remains outside the gates of the house with the driver, finding a quiet drama in the waiting: chatting with the cops, plucking flowers from a pile of leaves in the street, kicking an aerosol can down the street, where Kairostami watches it roll and roll and roll down the hill. None of these details are necessary to the central story but they add up to some of the most memorable moments of the film. When the reporter reemerges (after a desperate search for a portable tape recorder) he gives that aerosol can a triumphant kick to end the scene.

Much of Kiarostami’s cinema—of Iranian cinema [in this era] as a whole, in fact—explores the relationship between spectator and screen and the nature of cinematic representation. In Close-Up we see these ideas in the forefront (years before similar approaches in films as Mohsem Makhmalbaf’s A Moment of Innocence, 1996, and his daughter Samira Makhmalbaf’s The Apple, 1998). On the surface is the story itself, which played out in three arenas: the recreations (a mix of scripted drama and improvisation), the on-camera interviews, and the court footage. Even taking away my own skepticism (after a few years of Iranian cinema, I no longer readily accept anything as “real,” at least in the documentary recording sense, anymore), what we’re seeing is not layers of reality but performance; what comes across most strongly is not the gap between dramatic recreation and documented “news,” but how in every venue the players put on their public faces for the camera, for the judge, for their fellow participants.

Kiarostami is no judge; he’s not after guilt or innocence, but people in all their complexity, and he investigates with love. In the latter half of the film Kairostami replays the arrest scene from inside the house. Sabzian, who has never made a film, pours out his passion for cinema in long philosophical pronouncements on art and truth. The multiplicity of screens between performer and event is astounding: the real life con man, who escapes his lack of self esteem by play acting the part of a great artist, now plays himself playing that part in a dramatic recreation where, for those moments, he becomes a filmmaker in his own right. Is this expression any less real than the documentary footage of the trial? If he is, as the son insists, “still playing a part” in the courtroom, is this in fact more real? Or is it simply just another hidden facet of the man, the truth pulled out of a multitude of fictions.

By the end of Close-Up the seeming simplicity of technique has given way to a remarkable complexity, like a Renoirian take on Citizen Kane where the truth is not found under the masks but in their fusion. In the final scenes, a brilliant mix of contrivance, intimacy, distance, and dramatic closure peered into like a voyeur, questions of performance and spontaneous action are tossed to the wind in a moment of emotional power. Maybe we are all actors on a stage, but that doesn’t make our performance any less poignant. Or real.







http://nitroflare.com/view/5E50EEBA79F3D51/Abbas_Kiarostami_-_%281990%29_Close-Up.mkv

Language(s):Persian, Azerbaijani
Subtitles:English


Ida Panahandeh – Nahid (2015)

Jafar Panahi – Ayneh AKA The Mirror (1997)

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Synopsis:
A girl in traditional female clothing, with her arm in plaster, comes out of school one day and doesn’t find her mother meeting her. She decides to travel home herself though she doesn’t know her address and remembers the road only visually.






Review:

School has just let out, and a little girl named Mina (Mina Mohammad-Khani) stands scowling at the curb of a crowded thoroughfare in the heart of Tehran while waiting for her mother. When no one comes, Mina, who has one arm in a sling, becomes impatient. A friend of a teacher volunteers to take her by motorbike to a bus stop. But before they arrive, Mina impulsively dashes off and hops on a bus that proves to be heading in the wrong direction.

Once aboard, she overhears the conversations of a number of Iranians. An old woman complains about the cruelty and ingratitude of her children. A group of young women discuss a cheating husband. All over the city, radios are broadcasting the play-by-play of a soccer match between Iran and South Korea.

These opening scenes in Jafar Panahi’s powerful film “The Mirror” are so realistic that the movie has the feel of a documentary made with a hidden camera. The teeming streets and intimate conversations convey a remarkably intense picture of a particular city’s mood and texture at a specific moment. If that mood is predominantly optimistic, there is an undercurrent of discontent and bitterness in the women’s conversations.

At the same time, Miss Mohammad-Khani conveys an amazing richness of character. Impulsive, stubborn and feisty, but increasingly worried as she becomes lost in the big city, Mina often wears the hard, critical expression of a middle-aged woman. It is difficult to imagine that when this strong-willed girl grows up, she will readily submit to Islamic laws severely restricting women’s freedom.

At the halfway point, “The Mirror” takes a surprising turn. Miss Mohammad-Khani removes her sling, announces she’s tired of acting and runs off. A movie that at first appeared to be a neo-realist gem, reminiscent of “The Bicycle Thief,” abruptly turns into a complicated exploration of cinematic illusion and reality as the movie continues to be shot with Miss Mohammed-Khani going in and out of character according to whim. In some scenes, she is Mina (but minus the sling), in others she is “herself.” The more she changes back and forth, the more the two Minas blur together.

Late in the film, the audio begins to fade in and out, as the young actress’ (or the cameraman’s) body microphone malfunctions.

By the end of the movie, the perspective has shifted from Mina to the headstrong girl playing her to the frustrated (still largely unseen) filmmakers watching their work-in-progress fall apart.

Panahi, who is best known for the acclaimed 1995 film “The White Balloon,” is a disciple of the Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami, whose ultra-realistic films also deliberately undercut their own verisimilitude by revealing the filmmaking process and exploring the relation between the actors and their characters. Like those films, “The Mirror” poses the deepest questions about illusion, reality and filmmaking. Its portrait of Tehran is unforgettable.

— STEPHEN HOLDEN (The New York Times)

http://nitroflare.com/view/188EE96D1A10A8D/The_Mirror_%281997%29_–_Jafar_Panahi.mkv

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English (hardcoded)

Saeed Roustayi – Abad va yek rooz AKA Life+1Day (2016)

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The graphic account of a poverty-stricken family living in Tehran through the days before the youngest daughter of the family, Somaieh, is departing to start her marriage to a supposedly rich Afghan. While all members of the family have their worries about the wholeness of the marriage, she is struggling with her madly debilitating troubles including a silly mother who is gravely ill, a drug abusing brother, an obsessively compulsive sister, a considerably smart teenage brother who is being ruined in the environment, and a cunning oldest brother in need of money.




http://nitroflare.com/view/6D2F25363A75315/Abad_va_yek_rooz_%282016%29.mkv

http://uploadgig.com/file/download/2Bce932B6d807d56/Abad va yek rooz 2016.mkv

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Asghar Farhadi – Forushande AKA The Salesman (2016)

Reza Dormishian – Lantouri (2016)

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Quote:
A Girl is attacked by her lover with Acids.



Lantouri is the name of a gang that mugs people in broad daylight on the streets of Tehran and breaks into homes in the city’s rich northern district. The gang also kidnaps children from families who have become wealthy through corruption and embezzlement of state funds.

Read more: link

http://nitroflare.com/view/04CB30188C539E9/Lantouri.2016.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/b0507a97fff48e96/Lantouri.2016.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Asghar Farhadi – Forushande AKA The Salesman (2016)

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Quote:
One of the many reasons that Alfred Hitchcock is arguably the greatest filmmaker of all time — the quintessential filmmaker — is that his spirit and technique infuse the work of so many other directors (maybe all of them). He is, of course, the eternal god of anyone who has ever made a thriller. But he also hovers over those who could hardly be less “Hitchcockian.” A perfect example is the masterly Iranian writer-director Asghar Farhadi. Farhadi makes dramas of domestic discord that refuse to heighten anything they show you; they are steadfastly observant, unvarnished, specific and real. Yet when we watch a Farhadi film like “A Separation” or “The Past,” or his new one, “The Salesman,” we’re seduced, almost by a kind of invisible reverse trickery, into a situation of clear-eyed naturalism, except that they also start to realize we’re caught in a gathering storm, and it has everything to do with the shifting interior sands of the people onscreen. We’re caught up in something that can only be called suspense, and it’s galvanizing, but the suspense hinges purely on what’s going on in the characters’ hearts and minds.

“The Salesman,” rather uncharacteristically for Farhadi, opens on a note of stark cataclysm. An apartment building in Tehran appears to be ready to collapse, and the residents, who include the film’s married protagonists, Emad (Shahab Hosseini) and Rana (Taraneh Alidoosti), are rushing out of there as if for their very lives. In the end, the building stays standing, but it’s a wreck, with gas leaks and giant cracks in the walls. Emad and Rana are forced to find another apartment, and they quickly do, moving into a shabby but spacious flat built onto the roof of a nearby building. But the queasy karma of that nearly imploding structure carries over to the new place. The former tenant leaves half her stuff there and refuses to come get it. When they ask why, the answer hinges on the fact that she is, as it is euphemistically phrased in Tehran, a woman of many male companions (in other words, a prostitute). The inconvenience nags, and then something happens that nudges the annoyance into darker terrain. Rana, home alone, hears the intercom, and buzzes in the person she assumes is Emad, only he isn’t.

Later on, Emad returns, and as he walks up the stairs, he sees bloody footprints, and inside the apartment he finds Rana, who has been struck in the head by an intruder while she was in the shower. At the hospital, she receives stitches, and her prognosis is fine. Except that everything is not fine. Stuff happens, and innocent people can get attacked in a big city, but the nearly random assault on Rana undercuts her well being. She is frightened … but she is also defensive. She wants Emad, a high school literature teacher, to stay home from school … but she also wants to be left alone. She’s a bundle of nerves (understandably), but more than that, she’s a bundle of contradictions. And that eats away at his nerves. Emad comes off as a paragon of chivalry who wants only to soothe and support his wife. But the situation is so jangled with Rana’s “unreasonable” feminine neurotic emotion that it won’t allow him to. And he starts to grow impatient.

For a healthy stretch, “The Salesman” is even more low-key, minimal and contained than the earlier Farhadi films. Yet the writer-director’s technique is just as assured as before. Every shot is in place, every line leading to an outcome that feels quietly up for grabs. As Emad begins to investigate the crime, he finds a cell phone and a set of keys that open a pickup truck that was left on their block. For a while, none of this seems to go anywhere. “The Salesman” generates relatively little tension as a neorealist detective yarn. But that’s all by design. Emad is only a so-so sleuth, but then he stumbles, virtually by accident, onto the person who, it appears, struck his wife in the shower. The perpetrator is not what we expect, and the revelation of who did it is not the point. The point is something far more saturated with emotional intrigue: Now that Emad has found the crook, what will he do with this knowledge?

In a revenge film like “Taken,” the hero, murderous with righteous passion, gets to enjoy the satisfaction of payback (as does the audience), but his machinations also serve a moral purpose: He’s finding his daughter and getting her back. In “The Salesman,” the psychology of vengeance is almost metaphysical in its complexity. Emad wants to punish the man who has caused all these problems for him — and considering that the damage the man inflicted was bloody and dangerous, there doesn’t seem to be much ambiguity about it. But the real problem that Emad is dealing with is the emotional withdrawal of his wife. That’s what’s making him angry; that’s what he wants revenge for. Deep down (in a way that he has zero awareness of), he’s getting back at her. And that’s what makes the unfolding drama of “The Salesman” so tense and devastating. The film is beautifully acted by Shahab Hosseini, who makes Emad a knight with a control freak inside, and Taraneh Alidootsi, who suggests a woeful Iranian version of Marion Cotillard. But the great performance here is that of Babak Karimi, as the lumpish nobody who caused all this. At first, you look at him with a shrug, maybe a glint of contempt, but within 20 minutes, he may have you in tears.

The film’s title, incidentally, refers to an amateur production of “Death of a Salesman” that Emad and Rana are both performing in. He’s playing Willy Loman, and she plays his wife, the beleaguered Linda. It’s a conceit that comes off as something of a contrivance — at least, until the very end, when the parallel between Emad and Willy at last hits home. They are good men who, through the tragedy of their choices, wind up letting down the people they love. Farhadi has fashioned a dramatic critique of what he portrays as the Iranian male gaze — a gaze of molten judgment and anger. As a filmmaker, though, his gaze is true.






http://nitroflare.com/view/3F5EBC6F301339C/Asghar_Farhadi_-_%282016%29_The_Salesman.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/8DBE11F70C167AE/Asghar_Farhadi_-_%282016%29_The_Salesman.srt

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/7cf935b668f8ef5F/Asghar Farhadi – 2016 The Salesman.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/1d4d3E3C10027107/Asghar Farhadi – 2016 The Salesman.srt

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:None

Kianoush Ayari – Boodan yaa naboodan AKA To be or Not to be (1998)

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Imdb review
Life is Precious, 21 August 2000
Author: Martin Kohler (mkohler@geoscience.org.za) from Pretoria, South Africa
Having known someone who needed a kidney transplant, I was aware of the tremendous difficulty in finding a tissue matched donor organ. This film, which is about a heart transplant, brings out the desperation of the patient for whom there is no longer any other treatment option very clearly and realistically.

What I had not considered, and what this film made me aware of, is the extremely difficult position that the relatives of a deceased person are put in when they are requested to give permission for an organ donation. At this point they are already suffering from the shock and grief of having lost someone they loved, and this additional burden can test the limits of what they can bear.

This film is definitely not an “art” movie, but a very graphic and explicit documentation of what people experience under these circumstances. While modern medicine has brought with it many benefits (and I have seen the wonderful effect of a successful kidney transplant in real life), we still need to deal with our very human fears and prejudices.

I think that this is a most valuable film to see, as it confronts these issues in a very direct way, and may help to prepare one for the new moral and ethical responsibilities that technological advances have forced upon us.







http://nitroflare.com/view/9327E5B7E2BD888/TJP_007_To_Be_Or_Not_to_Be.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/8F0e935A9742b6fB/TJP 007 To Be Or Not to Be.mkv

Language(s):Persian, Armenian
Subtitles:English hardsubbed


Sohrab Shahid Saless – Yek Etefagh sadeh AKA A Simple Event (1974)

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Quote:
With A Simple Event Sohrab Shahid-Saless emerged on the Iranian film scene as a filmmaker with a distinctive style. Adopting an almost documentary style, Shahid-Saless records uneventful moments in the lives of ordinary people. He has said, “A Simple Event has no plot. It is only a report on the daily life of a boy”. Working with a cast of non-professional local players, Shahid-Saless constructed his film with realistic images that almost corresponded with the temporal flow of rural life. The film is so simple and unadorned that it creates the illusion of having been made with no prepared overall design.

For all its lyrical charm, A Simple Event must be considered as a prelude or a preparation for Shahid-Saless’s acclaimed film Still Life which was awarded the Silver Bear for best direction and the critics’ prize at the 24th Berlin International Film Festival in 1974.







http://nitroflare.com/view/8397097ABA60557/Sohrab_Shahid_Saless_-_%281974%29_A_Simple_Event.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/7B01707F18EE557/A_Simple_Event_%28Sohrab_Shahid_Saless_-1974%29.srt

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/e111c1DebD772c4e/Sohrab Shahid Saless – 1974 A Simple Event.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/566e8f402f67d77D/A Simple Event Sohrab Shahid Saless -1974.srt

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Parviz Kimiavi – Mogholha AKA The mongols (coloured version) (1973)

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From IMDB:
A director of a television series on the history of cinema, who has been grappling with the screenplay of his first feature film, receives an assignment to oversee the installation of a television relay station in a remote region of Zahedan province, near the Afghanistan border. He has already hired Turkoman tribespeople for his film and selected his filming location. Meanwhile his wife, who is working on her Ph.D. dissertation about the Mongol invasion of Iran, attempts to dissuade him from accepting the assignment. One night, while working on his history of the cinema series, the director fantasizes a diagetic world that consists of clever juxtapositions of his different worlds: the history of cinema, the history of the mongol invasion, his own film idea and his imminent assignment to the desert.





http://nitroflare.com/view/E48A9A0A45AC7D4/Mogholha_coloured.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/936753A1B4C7202/Mogholha_coloured.srt

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/E95688dd98e6B688/Mogholha coloured.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/64f0a65528Aaea21/Mogholha coloured.srt

Language(s).:Persian
Subtitles:French (hard),English

Mohsen Makhmalbaf – The Gardener (2012)

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Synopsis:
The Gardener is a surreal film made using documentary-style techniques via the cameras of father and son (the Makhmalbafs) who go to Israel to learn about a religion (Baha’i faith) that they don’t know much due to its taboo status in the country of both the filmmaker and the faith’s birth – Iran.








http://nitroflare.com/view/8E2D9EFEC775ED3/THE_GARDENER_-_by_Mohsen_Makhmalbaf_%28With_Subtitles%29.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/9dF377598c89b5a7/THE GARDENER – by Mohsen Makhmalbaf With Subtitles.mkv

Language(s):English, Persian, Tok Pisin
Subtitles:English (for the non English parts)

Narges Abyar – Nafas AKA Breath (2016)

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Quote:
Little Bahar lives a life spun from folklore and stories, always with her head in a book. But growing up in Yazd in the 1970s and ’80s, she’s at the centre of a country in turmoil: the Shah is overthrown, Ayatollah Khomeini rises to power, and the first shots are fired in a bitter and protracted war with Iraq. Over the span of several years, Bahar finds daydreaming in her own fantasy world is the only way she can make sense of the pain and suffering warring humans inflict on one another.





http://nitroflare.com/view/CCE2230038EB692/Nafas.AKA.Breath.2016.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Rakhshan Bani Etemad – Zir-e poost-e shahr AKA Under the Skin of the City (2001)

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Synopsis:
Tuba works daily at a grueling textile factory in Iran, returning home every night to deal with the rest of her problematic family, which includes: a pregnant daughter whose husband beats her regularly; a teenage son, who’s been getting into trouble due to his burgeoning career in radical politics; and an older son who goes to great lengths–such as attempting to sell the family’s meager house–in order to get an engineering job in Japan as a means of getting out of Iran. Unfortunately the ‘friend’ to whom he gave his money as an advance for his trip took off with the money, and the son finds himself without money, without a career, and with a debt towards a lot of people. To solve his problems he wants to deliver a package of heroin, but loses it, and has to flee. The film ends dramatically with a direct call from the mother to the camera crew asking what life has given them after all the sacrifices they have done, mirroring the opening scene. (Amazon)

Review:
Under the Skin of the City wants to be a gut-wrenching exploration of life in modern-day Iran. It wants to bridge cultural gaps by depicting a family and making you realize they’re much like yours. It wants to tell an interesting, but realistic, story. The film fails miserably on each of these counts, however, and is instead reduced to a series of melodramatic moments that will have the audience rolling their eyes in disbelief – if they can keep them open, that is.
In this subtitled film, Iranian female filmmaker Rakhshan Bani-Etemad presents the story of a selfless, depressed matriarch named Tuba (Golab Adineh). A mother of four, Tuba does her best to keep life going on the meager finances of herself and her disabled husband Mahmoud (Mohsen Ghazi Moradi). The children do their best to help out as well, but even all their meager wages combined can’t make things any better. more



http://nitroflare.com/view/90B4CFF68533CD2/Under_the_Skin_of_the_City.avi

http://nitroflare.com/view/B66DF46D48C7AFB/Under_the_Skin_of_the_City.idx

http://nitroflare.com/view/D53BF2E67CF7EC4/Under_the_Skin_of_the_City.rar

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English (idx)

Amir Naderi – Davandeh AKA The Runner (1984)

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Quote:
Amiro is a young boy who has lost his home during the war. He spends his days by working odd jobs, until he realizes that the only way that he can realize his dreams is by enrolling in school. In school, he has conflict with other students. Finally there is a competition to see who can say the whole alphabet in one breath.

The Runner won the main prize at the famous Three Continents Festival at Nantes in 1985. It is often compared to Truffaut’s The 400 Blows, but is even more anguished and intense.

It was one of the first Iranian films of the Revolutionary period to attract widespread acclaim abroad, several years before filmmakers like Abbas Kiarostami and Mohsen Makhmalbaf achieved international renown.






http://nitroflare.com/view/4024E65B1D9ED8C/The_Runner.mkv

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Negar Azarbayjani – Fasl-e Narges AKA Season of Narges (2017)


Albert Lamorisse – Bade-h Saba AKA Le vent des amoureux AKA The Lovers’ Wind (1978)

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Quote:
This is Albert Lamorisse’s last film. At the last stages of finishing the shooting in Iran, his helicopter crashed in the mountains of northern Iran, and the extremely talented and poetic filmmaker got killed immediately. Lamorisse, “Under the auspices of Iran’s Ministry of Culture and Art, produced the poetic film “Lovers’ Wind” (1969). Eighty-five percent of this dramatically visual film is shot from a helicopter, providing a kaleidoscopic view of the vast expanses, natural beauty, historical monuments, cities and villages of Iran. The “narrators” of the film are the various winds (the warm, crimson, evil and lovers’ winds), which according to folklore, inhabit Iran. They sweep the viewers from place to place across the Iranian landscape, introducing the incredible variety of life and scenery in Iran. The camera, defying gravity, with smoothness and agility, provides a bird’s eye view, caressing minarets and domes, peeking over mountain tops beyond, gliding over remote villages to reveal the life enclosed within the high mud-brick walls, bouncing along with the local wildlife, following the rhythmic, sinuous flow of the oil pipelines and train tracks, and hovering over the mirror-like mosaic of the rice paddies that reflect the clouds and sky. The film is a testimonial to the Iranian landscape and people over which so many dynasties and kings have ruled and have, in turn, passed away. Ironically, on the tenth anniversary of the completion of the film, yet another seemingly powerful dynasty (Pahlavi) has fallen, leaving, as the film points out, the land and the migrating tribal nomads who have survived more or less intact for centuries. Upon completion of the film, the Ministry of Culture and Art decided that Lamorisse had not sufficiently emphasized the industrialization of Iran. So he was called back to film additional sequences documenting that progress. This task was never completed, because the helicopter crashed while filming the Karaj Dam near Tehran, plunging Lamorisse and his crew to their deaths. This film, whose storybook style of narration is often contrived, does not purport to be a social document on Iran; nevertheless, it has never been shown publicly in theaters in Iran.” — Hamid Naficy






http://nitroflare.com/view/DA2E4F8483F821C/Albert_Lamorisse_-_%281978%29_The_Lovers%27_Wind.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/2abc2f7102efe/Albert_Lamorisse_-_%281978%29_The_Lovers%27_Wind.mp4

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Jalal Moghadam – Farar az Taleh AKA Escape From The Trap (1971)

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Quote:
A great Iranian film , unfortunately unknown in and out of Iran, 23 April 2008
Author: Armand Erfanian from United Kingdom

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

Farar az Tale is an unknown film out of Iran. Even in Iran nobody remembers of this beautiful little masterpiece. There are so many successful visual and musical devices all along the film. The first one is just at the opening and before the opening credits. A man is dropped on the street. Another man tries to see if he is still alive. In finding that he is not, he turns his head towards Morteza (Behrooz Vosooghi) and by his eye expression lets him know that. All that in silent cinema and taking only 23 seconds. That is truly cinema, The art of image! Then the opening credits start, during which we see Morteza in prison, his moustaches are little by little growing. This is economy of great cinema. Using the time of the credits for letting us know that he is in prison and making us feel the length of his stay. The proper plot will begin now, when he comes out of prison and looks for his beloved woman Mehri (Nilufar). Another great moment of the film is when Morteza is looking for a solution to find somehow the 10 000 tomans that he needs to give to the man who married his beloved to get her divorce. Now wandering in the city and its outskirts he walks, stops and sits and looks at people working. Great music of Rubik Mansuri covers this sequence, and still shots or pans get dissolved to each other and gives us impression of boring time that Morteza is experiencing under the hot sun of the South. Iranian cinema is full of so great films… It is a pity that they don’t get any chance to be known… The actors, Behrooz Vosooghi, Davood Rashidi and Abbas Nazeri are absolutely great.


http://nitroflare.com/view/AE2BC003B8F0851/Farar_az_Taleh_%281971%29-KG.avi

https://publish2.me/file/4dd55315ad327/Farar_az_Taleh_%281971%29-KG.mp4

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:None

Rakhshan Bani Etemad – Nargess (1992)

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A sharp-edged look at people who live outside the constraints of Islamic law. In her fourth feature, director Rakhshan Bani-Etemad tells the tragic story of a love triangle. Afagh, an aging thief who has lost her beauty, is on the verge of losing her young lover, Adel. When Adel meets the beautiful Nargess, he decides to go straight, but honest work does not come easily, and he decides to go back to the old life for one last job. “Bani-Etemad pushes the Iranian censorship code to the limit, managing to make her outsider characters believable and moving” (Deborah Young, Variety).






http://nitroflare.com/view/0F934A4D178C39C/19920914_-_Nargess_%28Rakhshan_Bani_Etemad%2C_1992%29_%28English_subtitles%29_%28VHS-rip%29.avi

https://publish2.me/file/542519de9a825/19920914_-_Nargess_%28Rakhshan_Bani_Etemad%2C_1992%29_%28English_subtitles%29_%28VHS-rip%29.mp4

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English (hard)

Samira Makhmalbaf – Sib AKA The Apple (1998)

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This unusual Iranian documentary/drama is based on the true story of a poor and religious 65-year-old father who kept his two 12-year-old daughters locked in their small house from the day that they were born. Their blind mother agreed with the arrangement since she was unable to supervise them in any other way. Thanks to the concern of neighbors over the plight of Massoumeh and Zahra, a social worker looked into the matter and found the girls unable to talk or walk properly. They were given the first baths in their lives and then returned to their home. The father, believing that he has been publicly shamed by his neighbors, promises not to keep them imprisoned anymore.

Eighteen-year-old-director Samira Makhmalbaf, the daughter of the filmmaker responsible for Gabbeh, takes this raw material and spins a fascinating drama out of the experiences of the girls after they are liberated by the social worker. Makhmalbaf uses the apple, which is a symbol of knowledge and enjoyment of life, as a major motif in the unfolding story. The film celebrates freedom and presents a severe critique of the continued shabby treatment of women in societies where patriarchal authoritarianism still holds sway.







http://nitroflare.com/view/3F645971D91D747/Samira_Makhmalbaf_-_%281998%29_The_Apple.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/7afb028e297a1/Samira_Makhmalbaf_-_%281998%29_The_Apple.mkv

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Dariush Mehrjui – Hamoun (1990)

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