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Iran's Women Face The Camera

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  • Iran's Women Face The Camera

    IRAN'S WOMEN FACE THE CAMERA
    David Parkinson

    guardian.co.uk
    Thursday 25 June 2009 12.23 BST

    As images of Neda Agha Soltan's lifeless face circumvent the globe,
    Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami has made a compelling study of
    the female face with Shirin

    In Kiarostami's Shirin, 113 actresses' faces are filmed as they watch
    a sentimental drama

    There's a horrific irony that Neda Agha Soltan should become an icon
    of Iran's struggle in the same week a sensitive study of the Iranian
    female face opens in cinemas. Abbas Kiarostami's Shirin is an ingenious
    film that deserves the widest possible audience. It cannot, of course,
    match the horror and power of those images of the 26-year-old student
    as she lay dying on Karegar Avenue after being shot in the chest last
    Saturday evening.

    Shirin Release: 2008 Country: Rest of the world Cert (UK): PG Runtime:
    90 mins Directors: Abbas Kiarostami Cast: Golshifteh Farahani, Juliette
    Binoche, Mahnaz Afshar, Niki Karimi More on this film Eyewitnesses
    maintain she was targeted by the Basij militia, despite playing a
    peripheral and wholly peaceful part in the protest. But, as Shirin
    also suggests, it's the impact of the image on the screen - not the
    truths behind it - that dictates the spectator's emotional response.

    Rarely has the status of women in the Muslim world been explored
    with such devastating simplicity as in Shirin. By exclusively
    employing close-ups of=2 0the shifting expressions of 113 actresses
    as they appear to watch a sentimental romantic melodrama, Kiarostami
    demonstrates the cultural, political and emotional intelligence that
    is often downgraded in patriarchal societies. Expanding upon 'Where
    Is My Romeo?' - Kiarostami's contribution to the 2007 portmanteau,
    Chacun son cinéma - and his 2008 multimedia installation, Looking at
    Tazieh, this is a masterly variation on the 1920s Kuleshov experiment
    that demonstrated filmic meaning's heavy dependence upon context.

    Moreover, it continues his audacious attempt to put the abstract into
    arthouse and even seems to reinforce the contention that Iran has
    developed a cinema of moral anxiety similar to the one that emerged
    in Poland in the late 1970s, when Andrzej Wajda, Krzysztof Zanussi,
    Agnieszka Holland and Krzysztof Kieslowski anticipated the rebellious
    spirit of an oppressed society prior to the formation of the Solidarity
    trade union.

    It's tempting to suggest that Iranian film-makers like Kiarostami, the
    Makhmalbaf family, Jafar Panahi, Abolfazl Jalili, Rakhshan Bani-Etemad
    and Bahman Ghobadi have been reflecting a similar undercurrent of
    popular discontent, as so many recent releases have explored topics
    that would previously have been considered taboo. And what is so
    intriguing is that the majority of these insights into women's
    rights, urban poverty, prostitution, drug addiction, bureaucratic
    incompetence, legal intransigence and the growin g student fascination
    and familiarity with outside ideas and new technologies have been
    granted export licences by a regime that is supposedly stricter than
    Poland's pre-glasnost communists.

    Shirin consists of a group of women watching a movie adaptation
    of Nezami Ganjavi's 12th-century fable about the rivalry for an
    Armenian princess between Farhad the sculptor and the Persian
    prince, Khosrow. The storyline is an irrelevance, however, despite
    the impassioned performances of an ulterior vocal cast and an emotive
    score. What does matter is the art of screen acting, the perceptiveness
    of the camera and the persuasive power of cinema.

    Kiarostami reportedly mocked up an auditorium in his living room and
    coaxed his cast into exhibiting a range of emotions while following
    three dots on a blank sheet of paper. With Hedieh Tehrani, Niki Karimi,
    Leila Hatami and Juliette Binoche among those enduring the relentless
    gaze of Gelareh Kiazand's camera, this is a compelling catalogue of
    such basic audience responses as rapture, distraction, longing, fear,
    laughter and tears.

    However, it's also a subversion of narrative norms that lauds cinema's
    ability to offer consolation, as it compels the viewer to speculate
    upon the personality and domestic situation that prompts each woman's
    reaction to the unseen scenario. Moreover, Kiarostami courageously
    confounds fundamentalist attitudes by challenging the wearing of
    burkas, as he showcases the expressive bea uty of the hijab-framed
    face in close-ups as affecting as those of Renée Falconetti in Carl
    Theodor Dreyer's silent masterpice, The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928).

    Kiarostami's use of subtle shifts in expression to celebrate life is
    mesmerising. But Neda Agha Soltan's lifeless face will rightly and
    undoubtedly leave the deeper impression.
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