Tag Archives: 2022

Facing Mirrors

Facing Mirrors

Date: Mon 18 Apr 2022
Time: 18:00pm

Negar Azarbayjani • Iran 2011 • 102m • PG • Persian; German with English subtitles

Set in contemporary Iran, Facing Mirrors is a story of an unlikely and daring friendship that develops despite social norms and religious beliefs. Although Rana is a traditional wife and mother, she is forced to drive a cab to pay off the debt that keeps her husband in prison. By chance she picks up the wealthy and rebellious Edi, who is desperately awaiting a passport to leave the country. At first Rana attempts to help, but when she realizes that Edi is transgender, a dangerous series of conflicts arises. Directed by Negar Azarbayjani, Facing Mirrors is the first narrative film from Iran to feature a transgender main character.

Careless Crime

Careless Crime

Date: Sun 17 Apr 2022
Time: 20:30pm

Shahram Mokri • Iran 2020 • 134m • 12A • Drama • Persian with English subtitles

Forty years ago, during the uprising to overthrow the Shah’s regime in Iran, protestors set fire to movie theatres as a way of showing opposition to Western culture. Many cinemas were burned down. In one tragic case, a theatre was set on fire with four hundred people inside, most of whom were burned alive.
Forty years have passed and, in contemporary Iran, four individuals also decide to burn a cinema down. Their intended target is a theatre showing a film about an unearthed, unexploded missile. Will past and present meet?

Trailer

Radiograph of a Family

Radiograph of a Family

Date: Sun 17 Apr 2022
Time: 15:20pm

Firouzeh Khosrovani • Iran 2020 • 83m • PG • Persian with English subtitles

I am the product of Iran’s struggle between secularism and the Islamic ideology. My
parents’ love story takes us from the Shah era to the Islamic Revolution and the hardships during the Iran-Iraq War, up to the present day – all in our home in Tehran. In my childhood, I was constantly forced to choose between my parents; each day, I endured imposition from one side and acceptance from the other.

A love story, two different beliefs, a family in the turmoil of Iran’s modern history.

Trailer

TiTi

TiTi

Date: Fri 16 Apr 2022
Time: 17:25pm

Ida Panahandeh • Iran 2020 • 103m • PG • Persian with English subtitles

A hospitalized, critically ill physicist, working on a theory about black holes and the end of the world, meets a rather eccentric hospital housekeeper named TiTi. Though single, TiTi is acting as a surrogate mother for an infertile couple in order to serve humanity and raise money to build a small room of her own. When the physicist falls into a deep coma, TiTi, raised by Iranian gypsies and possessing supernatural powers, performs a strange ritual to save him. This is the start of an odyssey; an odyssey that changes their lives forever.

Placement or Displacement + Making Space: Women and Freedom of Movement

Placement or Displacement

Date: Sat 16 Apr 2022
Time: 12:00pm
Parisa Gorgin • Various 2021 • 67m • U • Documentary • Persian with English subtitles

The Iranian diaspora has witnessed an influx of immigrants to countries all over the world, some have gone on to build new lives and some have since returned, but they all share an inexplicable longing…

Making Space: Women and Freedom of Movement

Nacim Pak-Shiraz • UK-Iran 2021 • 43m • U • Video Essay • Persian with English subtitles

An examination of freedom of movement in films by Iranian filmmakers  and the role that gender plays in the access and experience of space within Iranian society.

Zalava

Zalava

Date: Fri 17 Apr 2022
Time: 17:30pm
Arsalan Amiri • Iran 2021 • 93m • 12A • Persian with English subtitles

In 1978, the inhabitants of a small village in Iran called Zalava claim there is a demon among them. Massoud, a young gendarmerie sergeant, who investigates this claim encounters an exorcist attempting to rid the village of the demon. When he arrests the exorcist on charges of fraud, the villagers fear and anger escalates. Massoud and his love interrest, a government doctor, soon find themselves trapped in a cursed house, surrounded by villagers who believe they are both possessed by the demon.

A Message from the Film Curator

I am delighted to welcome you to this year’s Edinburgh Iranian Film Festival! 

March 2020 was our last festival, which feels like a very long time ago. It’s a great pleasure to be back here at the Filmhouse! 

We have lined up seven films over the next four days and they range from the latest releases to some of the iconic films in in Iranian cinema – from Friday night’s opening screening of Zalava (Arsalan Amiri, 2021), which depicts the power and threats of superstition to our closing film Facing Mirrors (Negar Azarbayjani, 2011), which examines the challenges of transgenders in Iran. 

The weekend will have four screenings with five films. Saturday afternoon’s screening includes two films. Parisa Gorgin’s documentary Placement or Displacement (2021), documents the experiences of Iranians who migrated out of Iran and those who chose to return to the homeland. The issue of migration has always been a very hot topic and this makes for an interesting reflection on the experience of those who have undertaken this journey. Making Space: Women and Freedom of Movement (Nacim Pak-Shiraz, 2022) then studies the relationship between gender and space in the works of female filmmakers.

Our Saturday evening screening, Titi (2020), is directed by one of my favourite filmmakers, Ida Panahandeh. We’ve showcased two of Panahandeh’s previous films, Nahid (2015) and Israfil (2017), in our earlier festivals, so you can tell I’m a fan. Titi is a heart-warming story about the transformative power of love in a world that dichotomises reason and the belief in the supernatural.

On Sunday, we have two screenings: Kicking off in the afternoon is an amazing documentary called Radiograph of a Family (2020). Firouzeh Khosravani uses family photographs and archival materials to poetically narrate the differences and tensions in her parental home and how the revolution expanded her mother’s space and shrunk that of her father’s. 

Sunday evening sees Careless Crime (2020) by the time- and space-bending director, Shahram Mokri, who is a master of playing with form and the cinematic language. I was delighted to pre-record an interview with him, which will be screened after the film and allow audiences to learn more about his approach to filmmaking. The Q&A will be available after the screening on the festival’s website.

I also want to point out that of the seven films in the festival, five are directed by women. While this wasn’t entirely a conscious decision, I had aimed at achieving a minimum 50/50 representation in line with our practice for some years now and am delighted that it turned out this way.

Finally, I’d like to thank the distributors of the films we’re screening for their help, Filmhouse for its ongoing support of the festival, and the director and trustees of the festival for inviting me to curate another season of Iranian films. And of course, none of this would be possible without the support, enthusiasm and thirst for understanding that our audience demonstrates every year we hold the festival. 

Thank you and enjoy the festival!

Professor Nacim Pak-Shiraz, University of Edinburgh
April 2022

A Message from the Director of the Festival

Welcome to the Edinburgh Iranian Festival 2022!

It’s been two years since our last festival in March 2020. Then, Covid–19 was still a mystery, there was no shortage of hand gel, and while handshakes and hugs had just begun being awkwardly replaced with elbow bumps and footshakes, masks were still not a thing. We have the pictures from the festival’s opening night to prove it!

How much the world has changed since then! The rollercoaster journey of the past two years with its multiple loops of hope and despair has made at least one thing clear – our enduring need to connect, and the vital role that art, music, literature, and film play in order to do so.

And so I am delighted that our festival is back this year, doing its part to stimulate conversation, build bridges, and enable understanding.

There’s something for everyone in our curated line up of film screenings and I hope you’ll find a favourite (or two!) to share and discuss.

On behalf of the trustees of the festival, I would like to thank our volunteers and supporters. A special shout out to Andy Watson and Dr Arash Eshghi for updating our website, Ania Urbanowska and Sarvnaz Geranpayeh for facilitating our social media, and Maryam Zabihifard for creating our poster. And a massive thank you to Professor Nacim Pak-Shiraz for curating a seventh film season for us! And, of course, to the Filmhouse, who share our passion for fabulous films.

Enjoy the screenings and khosh amadid!

Sara Kheradmand