Showing posts with label Mohammad Ali Talebi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mohammad Ali Talebi. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 June 2020

Willow and Wind, an Overlooked Gem Scripted by Abbas Kiarostami

Willow and Wind

Willow trees bend easily in the slightest breeze, but even the wildest wind cannot uproot them. That is, more or less, the story of children in Mohammad Ali Talebi’s cinema; they are affected by every turn, every event, each nuance of the adult world, but they never fall down or stop fighting.

Willow and Wind is Talebi’s greatest cinematic achievement, both in terms of narrative and visual style. It tells an amazingly simple, sometimes absurd story. Like a Persian miniature, it is expressed through fine details. It depicts the efforts of a young boy to carry a large piece of glass some distance across country, to reach the school where he has broken a window during a football match. He’s not allowed back into class until he mends it.

Monday, 13 April 2015

The Boot [Chakmeh] (1993)

From my programme notes, written in 2014, for theatrical release of the film in the UK. -- E.K.
Seven years before the release of Mohammad Ali Talebi’s The Boot, the film which first brought him to international attention, he directed a puppet road movie, in which a gang of young mice unite against a vicious cat, whom their parents have given up hope of defeating. In The Boot it is real children who are fighting against the odds – and rather than a vicious cat, it is the crowded capital of Iran, Tehran, which threatens to overwhelm them.

Most of Talebi’s films about children feature an absent parent or two. In this case, young Samaneh’s father has died. In a shoe store, where the girl’s mother stares longingly at a happy couple shopping together, the gaze not only underlines the absence of her husband, but also the absence of a father figure in Samaneh’s life. Talebi’s interest lies in showing how children manage to fill that void.
 
Samaneh is a war child. The film was produced by Shahed TV (which translates as Martyr’s TV) whose remit was to depict the lives of those who lost family members during the eight-year war with Iraq. The heavy burden on children born during the war is subtly manifested throughout the film; particularly in one scene which takes place on a public bus, when a young boy is seen guiding an elderly blind man. These children, through pure curiosity, resilience and stubbornness are unconsciously reconstructing a damaged country.

Thursday, 2 April 2015

Bag of Rice (1998)

From my programme notes for the Cinema of Childhood season in the UK, April 2014.

Bag of Rice [Kiseye Berendj] Director: Mohammad Ali Talebi.
Iran, 1998. With Jairan Abadzade. 80 mins. Cert. U.

The moment that Jeyran, the unflagging young protagonist of Bag of Rice, sets out on her urban odyssey across south Tehran with her partially-sighted neighbour Masoumeh Khanoom, two children – one of whom is lugging a gas cylinder with difficulty– are seen walking towards the camera. The scene takes place in a narrow, brick-walled alley; it is representative of director Mohammad Ali Talebi’s film style and contains the essence of his view of the lives of children in his home city. It expresses the responsibilities, or rather the burdens, that their circumstances demand they bear, and which force them to mature early in their lives. Children in Talebi’s films, especially in Bag of Rice, are not guided by adults, but rather they are the guiding force through the unexpected surprises of everyday life, on journeys of self-determination.

This perspective on youth in Tehran is found not only in the cinema of Talebi, but also in other films produced by the Institute for Intellectual Education of Children and Young Adults – where Talebi and numerous contemporaries, including Abbas Kiarostami, started out as working directors. It is an outlook that owes much to the second “author” of the film, screenwriter Houshang Moradi-Kermani, the leading proponent of literature focusing on children and teenagers in Iran.

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Rediscovering Mohammad Ali Talebi


The Cinema of Childhood, a season of 17 films with/about children and childhood from all over the world, curated by Mark Cousins, hit the UK screens in April. I've been commissioned to write about three films in the season by Iranian filmmaker Mohammad Ali Talebi. Most of these films see the light of the UK screens for the first time, especially Talebi's. I'm also glad to announce Talebi is coming to the UK to attend some of the events, including a Q&A at the BFI Southbank with Mark Cousins.

The three short essays with links to the website of the season (which is also my job) are: