In a land where,
acting is categorized as a decadent cultural practice; actors are forced to unreasonable
conformity and women actors follow the Islamist edict of maintaining the
stringent code of conduct; it is an avant-garde to make cinema portraying real
Iran.
Iran’s film industry
is known for its strife against the fundamentalism and the ever-changing decree
related to the depiction of women affairs in films. It is astonishing to see
that in a nation which is still driven by religious fanaticism, filmmakers are
attempting to make remarkable films conforming to the obstinate laws that
govern it.
Iran as a nation has
frequently witnessed movements related to women rights. Cinema seems to be a
practice; especially a respite to the prevalent rules that demarcate women’s
existence. If we observe; the recent times have made cinema a yardstick to
measure the social, political, cultural and economical progress in Iran. The
filmmakers through their innovative depiction and portrayal of realism in an innocuous
manner have made their voices heard, and also at the same time kept the moral
watchdogs at bay.
Women characters on
screen are evidently entangled between the intertwining state regulations and
socio-cultural limitations. If we look at the history of women actors in Iran;
theirs is the most deplorable position. The societal norms albeit stern and
contentious; filmmakers are driven more by a strong passion, to make cinema a
medium to voice their apprehensions in the muddled state.
Even today, the appearance
of uncovered women on screen is strictly forbidden. A woman’s interaction with
men other than husband, father, brother and son is not allowed. Under this
overbearing religious dogma, making a full length cinema featuring women is a
difficult job. The filmmakers’ skills lie in following a non-confrontational
narrative style of expression. Female characters were however bound by the
persisting religious and social demands. Their characters are restricted to
secondary roles. Even through the
secondary characters; mainly that of mothers, sisters and wives and women, they
were unable to depict their part realistically, owing to decree that limit
their interaction with the opposite sex. Even the slightest idea of suggestive
sexual attraction was considered decadent and threatening; and hence got
omitted in most of the cases.
A Separation
A Separation by Asghar
Farhadi is winning rave reviews across the globe. The film which
portrays the predicament of a middle class Iranian family at the verge of
annulment has won immense acclaim and prestigious recognitions from critics and
viewers alike. The latest achievement to the films credit is the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film 2012.
The film is a representation of the conflicts between hope and the dismay that clouds the present life of the lead characters. It begins with a colossal disappointment in the marital life of two young middle class Iranians, Nader and Simin. It is a stark imagery of the current social, economical, and cultural scenario in Iran.
Simin bears the responsibility of the well being of the family and wants them to move out of Iran to provide a bright future to her 12 year old daughter Teremeh. Her husband, Nader, disapproves the idea of fleeing Iran for a better place; he reasons his disapproval of the flight with the degenerating condition of his old father afflicted by Alzheimers. The couple separates; leaving the daughters life in a disjointed situation.
A Separation implicitly depicts the abject realities of life.
The gulf that divides the privileged and the underprivileged is shown in the
light of a disagreement. Simin while leaving her husband’s home hires a home
maid, Razieh who is 3 months pregnant, to take care of her husband’s home,
which also has his ailing father, and their daughter. On Razieh’s first day at
Nader’s house; she is duty-bound to clean the old man who urinated in his
pants. Before cleaning the old man, Razieh – perplexed and apprehensive, like
any other woman would have been in her position; calls up a cleric, to confirm
whether if it was unlawful of her to clean a “na-mahram”(a man other than,
husband, brother, father and son). This particular scene evokes the moral
dilemma during the time of adversity; the film has several scenes, where we
come across the confrontation between the two impossible choices - between
religious ethics and humanism. As the film progresses, a certain unpleasant
event compels Nader to push the home maid out of the house, causing an injury
that results in an abortion. This results in a chain of events. The film is an
intense narrative, which needs the viewers full focus to decipher the intricacies that
this (if I can call it) thriller poses.
The major themes in the film are family loyalty, religion,
economical inequality, migration, class division, and troubled-relations. The
film also in a way satirizes the much debated “veiling of women”. It subtly evokes
the irrationality behind the dress code, and this is pretty evident when the
protagonist claims his ignorance to the fact that the home maid was pregnant,
and this he attributes to the chador(fabric
to cover the body, similar to purdah), which makes it difficult to determine the physical traits of a pregnant woman. The Koran is a re-occurring aspect, as the
victim of the crime is a deeply religious woman, who experiences a conflict
between moral imperatives at various junctures in the film.
Farhadi’s A Separation,
doesn’t boast of technical brilliance or a phenomenal cinematography, as most of
the film seems to be shot under hand held cameras. The unsteadiness of the
shots particularly adds to the mystifying effect that this intense film exudes.
All the actors have been exceptionally gifted when it came
to depicting their complex yet realistic characters with ease and utmost
conviction.
Rating: 3.5/5
* The introduction is the result of my extensive reading
about Iran and this is my first Iranian film. Gratitude to my MA program, I am
glad that they prescribed Reading Lolita in
Tehran by Azar Nafisi, as it has made me perceptive to women centric issues.
7 comments:
Reviews are meant for watchers and viewers.
Bourgeois can have all the literary pleasures, but we the proletariats have empty pockets, that makes us see nothing but bread...
I can see an Artist involved in creation, wish never separated but always together.
Very informative Bijin...ur write ups are too good to read and enjoy...Keep it on ..:)
hello buddy! i'll read the post in detail later. i LOVE all things about Iranian films. can never get enough of them. i envisage owning a collection of them. n, yes, i will eventually watch this flick too...SOMEHOW!
ALL THE BEST to u...n keep writing!
i hope the film is as griping as ur review :) keep writing.
Religious doctrine and humanism are something which I feel really really complecated unless we deal them with wisdom.
The unconventional way of film industry in country like Iran and Iraq, and the very act of female artists are something to do with contemporary glogal invention even though they are under home rule.
Yet,your review of the movie is very insightful reading technically, there is something innate discovered from your gazing at the movie;the margin where the GIRL left from the seperation of her parents and the hand-shot kind of film that you correspondence it with mysterious or rather instable life in Iran. I like it!
You always manage to keep the reader involved, now that i've read it i'm wanting to watch :)Keep up !
This post makes me wonder about the time in Bengali Theater and Utpal Dutta writing his Tiner Talwar. Similar notions of the woman being "bad" if she was a performer- especially in the world of theater.
You my friends are another word for gripping! :)
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