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Abbas Kiarostami, a Cinema of Participation [Introduction to Harvard Film Archive Retrospective, May 2020]

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Abbas Kiarostami circa late 60s, probably in his studio. On the wall (left) the poster for Masoud Kimiai's Come Stranger (1968), designed by Kiarostami.

Written for Harvard Film Archive's forthcoming retrospective dedicated to Kiarostami. More info here. — EK


Known for single-handedly putting Iran on the map of international cinema, Abbas Kiarostami’s filmmaking style was shaped by a variety of Persian arts, especially poetry. Reframing the world and the relationships between individuals through his creative involvement with actors—often amateurs, often children—and showing a keen eye for the beauty of landscapes, he produced philosophical works that reinvigorated the genres of documentary and narrative fiction.

Born in 1940, Kiarostami developed a love of painting at a young age, which led him to enroll in Tehran’s University of Fine Arts. During the 1960s he was involved in the film and television industry, both as a director of commercials and as a title designer for films. After the initiation of the Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults (known as Kanoon), which as part of its artistic activities provided funding and facilities for the production of films for or about children, Kiarostami joined the organization and made The Bread and Alley, a short film about a boy’s fear of a stray dog.
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I've Got Something to Say that Only You Children Would Believe — A Book Illustrated by Abbas Kiarostami

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Abbas Kiarostami had a long, colourful career as an illustrator, graphic and film title sequence designer, and photographer before his career as a filmmaker got kick-started in the early 1970s.

His slow success and even a slower international recognition meant that this first part of his artistic life had vert little chance to be appreciated in time and not surprisingly, it was overlooked even by his ardent audience. One could argue, his eventual coming back to these fields (plus poetry and installation) in the 21th century was itself a classic case of Kiarostamian "return" as often seen in his films: returning to a home, to a place, to a landscape, in this case, to old passions.

A great portion of the achievements of these early years remain unavailable but here we have a wonderful example of his illustration work which he contributed to a children book, written by modernist poet and author Ahmad Reza Ahmadi.

One of Kiarostami's illustrations for the book

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Richard Boleslawski

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بولسلاوسکی (راست) پشت صحنۀ تئودورا وحشی می شود با شرکت آیرین دان (وسط)، 1936
ريچارد بولسلاوسكي
متولد چهارم  فوريه 1889 در دبووا گورای لهستان درگذشته در هفدهم ژانويه 1937 در هاليوود كاليفرنيا
فارغ‌التحصيل مدرسه افسري سواره نظام Tver. تحصيل در تئاتر هنري مسكو زير نظر استانيسلاوسكي.شركت در جنگ جهاني اول به عنوان افسر سواره‌نظام ارتش تزار روسيه (لهستان در آن زمان بخشي از امپراتوري روسيه محسوب مي‌شد). بازي در چند فيلم روسي پيش از انقلاب که یکی از آن‌ها نسخۀ صامت ایوان مخوف (1915) بود و کارگردانی یک فیلم در همان سال. ترك روسيه بعد از انقلاب اكتبر و سپس جنگ علیه شوروی در ارتش لهستان. کارگردانی چند فیلم در لهستان که یکی از آنها، معجزه در ويستولا (1921) دربارۀ پيروزي لهستاني‌ها در مقابل سرخ‌ها در نبرد رودخانه ويستولا زباني مستندگونه داشت.
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The Night Before the Divorce (Robert Siodmak, 1942)

Moonfleet, Gothic and Scope

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فريتس لانگ، گوتيك و سینمااسكوپ

مونفليت تلخ‌ترين و احتمالاً گوتيك‌ترين فيلم "ماجرايي"سينماي كلاسيك آمريكاست. ژانري كه با طنز، ماجراهاي عاشقانه، رنگ‌هاي دلفريب و لباس‌هاي فاخر انبوهي از فيلم‌هاي محبوب و پرفروش را به سينما ارزاني داشته، در دستان لانگ به شرحي از تباهي دنيايي تاريك و غم‌زده تبديل مي‌شود. این‌که قهرمان اصلی فيلم يك پسربچه (جان وايتلي) است و ستارۀ بزرگ فيلم‌هاي شمشيرزني از خانوادۀ اسكاراموش، يعني استوارت گرينجر، کنار اوست کمکی به تلطیف نگاه لانگ نمی‌کند.
فيلم فضايي گرفته، مرده و حتي ترسناك دارد) که در آن از پایان خوش یا شور و عشق نشانی نیست. به جایش لانگ هرزگيِ شخصیت گرينجر در برخورد با زنان را نشان می‌دهد. مي‌گذارد. بیش‌تر نشانه‌‌های آشنای ژانر مثل گنج‌هاي مدفون، مخفيگاه‌هاي زيرزميني، مهماني‌هاي رقص و زنان حسود وجود دارند، اما به قول اندرو ساريس در مقایسه او بین مونفلیت و متروپولیس «هر دو فيلم در آن نگاه تلخ به دنيا مشتركند، در هردو انسان با تقديري محتوم دست به گريبان است، كشمكشي كه قطعاً به شكست انسان مي‌انجامد.»

On Film Curating [Scalarama Newspaper Interview]

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London
Interviewed by UK's Scalarama Newspaper in late summer 2019. EK


A VIEW FROM ABROAD


What inspired you to get into film programming?


    I was playing films, from VHS tapes, for my two sisters. Every day we were lying on the floor , putting our heads in 30 degree angels towards each on a big pillow -- almost like mummies -- totally transfixed by Singin' in the Rain or Citizen Kane, without understanding a word of English. It came out of that, a sort of natural tendency to share what you think is good. Later I thought if I could entertain my sisters, I might be able to keep more people entertained.

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    From the Archives: Iran - Rich Land, Poor Land

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    click to enlarge

    Poster (newsmap) produced by the US Army Information Branch in February 1946 to provide the army members with the basic information regarding the post-war landscape of Iran. Courtesy of the University of North Texas.

    Citation:

    [United States.] Army Information Branch. Newsmap for the Armed Forces : Iran, rich land poor land, poster, February 18, 1946; [New York]. (https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc830/m1/1/?q=iran: accessed April 11, 2020), University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.

    5 Nowruz Recommendations [1398]

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    جوسلین صعب

    پنج پیشنهاد تماشا برای نوروز 1398، به درخواست ماهنامۀ سینمایی فیلم.

    سه‌گانۀ بیروت(جوسلین صعب، 82-1976): این معادل تابلوی گِرنیکای پیکاسو در سینماست، همان اندازه تکان دهنده، موحش و ساخته شده سر یک بزنگاه تاریخی و اخلاقی. یک زن آن را در زیر بمباران‌های دائمی و در بین منظری از بچه‌هایی که بدن‌هایش از گرسنگی دفرمه شده و بدن‌های تحت تأثیر بمب‌های شیمیایی اسرائیل به رنگ آبی درآمده ساخته است. فیلم مناسب عید نیست، اما آیا واقعیت مخصوص مواقع مشخصی از سال است؟

    ای آفتاب (مد هوندو، 1970): بزرگ‌ترین کشف من در سال گذشته. اگر چارلی مینگوس (نوازنده باس و رهبر ارکستر موسیقی جاز در طرف مدرنش) فیلمساز بود، فیلمش اثری چنین خشمگین، زیبا، و با فرمی سیال از کار درمی‌آمد. فیلم دربارۀ تنهایی یک آفریقایی در اروپاست و این فیلمساز اهل موریتانی هر ثانیه‌ این دنیای دشوار را تجربه و لمس کرده است.
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    Murder Over New York (Harry Lachman, 1940)

    David Meeker's Ten Favourite Jazz Films

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    Duke Ellington behind the scene of NBC's What Is Jazz? (1958) episode#1 [Source: GettyImages]

    David Meeker, the author of Jazz in the Movies (and its online, massively updated version, Jazz on the Screen, available on the website of the Library of Congress), has been kind enough to furnish me with the list of his favourite jazz films. I don't think anyone in the world has seen as many jazz films as David has and certainly no-one has bothered spending years retrieving information (including song lists and personnel) from these films, compiling the indispensable encyclopedia that he has given us. For that reason, I think this list should be cherished more than other similar listings — this is the work of a man who has almost seen everything! - EK 



    By my reckoning the first ever sound film of a jazz performance was produced in 1922, a short featuring pianist Eubie Blake. Therefore, faced with almost 100 years of world cinema and taking a degree of masochistic pleasure in sticking my neck out I have managed with considerable difficulty to reduce untold millions of feet of celluloid to a necessarily subjective choice of 10 favourite titles, undoubtedly quirky but hopefully not pretentious. Try and see them if you can - they all have much to offer both intellectually and emotionally.
    David Meeker
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    Future Imperfect

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    Pis'ma myortvogo cheloveka

    فانتزی‌های آینده، کابوس‌های امروز
    احسان خوش‌بخت

    فیلم‌های علمی-تخیلی و فانتزی‌های ضدآرمان‌شهری امروز بیش از هر زمانی طنینی نزدیک به واقعیت دارند؛ بعضی‌هایشان حتی به مستند پهلو می‌زنند. در روزهای قرنطینۀ کرونا به سراغ یادداشت‌ها و فهرستی رفتم از سال 2017 که بعد از تماشای فیلم‌های رتروسپکتیوی دربارۀ سینمای علمی-تخیلی (Future Imperfect) در فستیوال فیلم برلین نوشته بودم. در این برنامه، «فیلم‌های علمی-تخیلی فاقد هیولا» نمایش داده شد، فیلم‌هایی که صاحب تخیل بودند اما تخیل‌شان فانتزی محض نبود و تا حدی ریشه در واقعیت یا احتمالات علمی داشت. خیلی از فیلم‌های نمایش داده شده را می‌شد آثار محیط‌زیستی خواند که نگرانی جدی‌شان از آیندۀ کرۀ زمین را پنهان نمی‌کردند. یکی از امتیازهای بزرگ برنامه معرفی فیلم‌های زیادی از کشورهای بلوک شرق سابق بود که لحن‌شان تفاوتی اساسی با نمونه‌های مشابه در غرب دارد و معمولاً آثاری فلسفی و اخلاقی‌اند تا سرگرمی برای بچه‌های بزرگ شده با کتاب‌های مصور. تقریباً تمام فیلم‌ها از نسخه‌های 35 میلیمتری نمایش داده شدند، طوری که این فیلم‌ها باید هرجایی دیده شوند.

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    Willow and Wind, an Overlooked Gem Scripted by Abbas Kiarostami

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    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.

    It is Laurel and Hardy, without Hardy. It is Samuel Beckett, interpreted by children. It is the bus sequence of Hitchcock’s Sabotage, without the explosive – although Talebi has confessed that he wanted to convey exactly the feeling that the boy is carrying an explosive! Willow and Windis pure suspense from beginning to end. What a Hollywood film does (or does not do) with $100 million, this film accomplishes with a pane of glass and a classroom of child actors.

    The script was written by Talebi’s mentor, Abbas Kiarostami. In return, Talebi dedicated the film to his fellow master filmmaker. “I wanted to get close to Kiarostami’s universe as much as possible,” says Talebi. He has also explained his long-standing interest in making this film, which he calls his favorite among the films he has directed, by reference to his passion for nature:  “I always wanted to make a film about nature, but my first attempt, in Barahoot, turned out to be a disaster. Even in my city films, I tried to create moments of interaction with nature, like rain pouring and things like that. [For this film] I wanted to capture certain moments in nature, the poetic moments of it.” Willow and Wind is truly full of these moments.

    Talebi with his piece of glass on the hills of Scotland. [Photo by Ehsan Khoshbakht]

    Talebi compares his style in this film, quite accurately, to abstract painting, and himself to the Yasujiro Ozu of Ohayō– more interested in supposedly insignificant moments of life, which leave a lasting impact on children. As he puts it, Talebi proves himself to be “more interested in the picturesque potentials of the story, rather than the story itself.” There is much evidence on the screen to confirm this interest, such as the long glass-carrying sequence, or the still more breathtaking scene of the boys trying to fit the glass in the wind-blown classroom. The wind has rarely been used to such dramatic effect since Victor Sjöström’s The Wind.

    Willow and Windis a significant, sadly neglected gem from the flourishing Iranian cinema of the 1990s. In the following decade, owing to the political climate of Iran and its ever-tightening censorship, many of Talebi’s fellow directors went into exile, or couldn’t make their films the way they wanted to. In this context, the climax of Willow and Wind, with all its ambiguity and its vague sense of hope for the future, sadly marks the end of an era in Iranian cinema. — Ehsan Khoshbakht


    Time Remembered: Chris Marker Picks His Favourite Bill Evans Recordings

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    Chris Marker in Telluride, 1987. Courtesy of Tom Luddy.

    On the art of lyrical compilation, from one medium to another

    Until midnight music is a job, until four o’clock it’s a pleasure, and after that it’s a rite.” – Chris Marker

    There are only indirect hints as to what Chris Marker liked and did beyond his films. In studying the world of this elusive director, every sign invites us to scrutinize it carefully. Marker appears in small details, such as the mix CD which one day arrived on my doorstep. If the address on the parcel hadn’t confirmed the sender as Tom Luddy, co-director of Telluride Film Festival and a close friend of Marker’s, I could have taken it to be Marker’s personal gift from the beyond.

    The CD cover gave little away: Sandwiching a photo of pianist Bill Evans was his name and the words "joue pour Guillaume" [plays for Guillaume], along with an illustrated image of the Markerian animal familiar Guillaume, a wise if mischievous-looking cat, holding sheet music. A lyrical filmmaker, who could also compose and play the piano, had compiled his favorite tunes performed by the lyrical jazz pianist and composer Evans (1929-80). The fascination with compilation is also evident in the films. Marker would often juxtapose material from various sources—news footage, computer games, photographs and songs—to remarkable effect.

    Tom Luddy recalls conversations about jazz with the filmmaker, who used to tune in to KJAZ whenever he was in the Bay Area. One of his favorite satellite TV channels was Mezzo, playing classical and jazz around the clock. While the genre didn't feature much in his films, one could argue that jazz for Marker, like cinema, was something both personal and political. His jazz-related writings for Esprit (“Du Jazz considere comme une prophetie”) and Le Journal des Allumés du Jazz seem to bear this out. Marker even made a small contribution to jazz literature by writing the narration for a documentary about Django Reinhardt directed by Paul Paviot, who'd previously produced Marker’s Sunday in Peking.


    Bill Evans

    “Marker also liked making special tapes and CDs for friends,” Luddy told me in an email. Probably compiled in January 1995, "Bill Evans joue pour Guillaume" reflects the ways in which jazz figured into Marker’s vigorously protected private sphere. The selection reveals the taste of a man who knows his subject thoroughly. Luddy confirms Marker as an avid listener when he talks of Marker’s obsession with Evans: “He loved Bill Evans’s versions of ‘Some Other Time,’ and he made a tape for friends of Evans’ versions, plus other versions by singers and pianists.”

    A technology-savvy Marker gives detailed specification of the digital content of the CD on a printed cutout. It lists track titles and album of origin, track lengths, as well as the total file size: 1.1 hours, 644.2 MB!

    Making a mixtape is like putting together a film program for one. It also has a delayed effect; like a message in a bottle sent out, only to be found later with the message intact. I have tried to decipher the message on this special disc. One thing is certain: It contains the after-4 a.m. kind of music—the ‘rite’ kind.



    Solo – In Memory of His Father: The significance of memory. Only days after the passing of Bill Evans’ father came the pianist’s New York concert debut, for which he assembled a requiem interweaving earlier compositions with those of Debussy and Satie. This haunting, melancholic contemplation of loss and absence was played only once more during Evans’ professional career: in 1968, in memory of Robert Kennedy.


    I Love You Porgy: Half of Marker’s choices here are live performances, suggesting an appreciation for the spontaneous. Recorded live on June 15, 1968, this was the first in a series of appearances (and recordings) by Evans at the most famous Swiss jazz festival.


    Quiet Now: Another Markerian preference: for solo works over group recordings, as if the filmmaker digs the pure artistic statement only when the artist in question is captured in quiet solitude.


    Danny Boy: Note the repeated use of proper nouns, especially the names of people, as if each brings back the memory of a real person: Porgy, Danny, Stella, Evan. Each has their own story to reveal.


    Stella by Starlight: Marker’s compilation seeks to create a subtle transition from silence, long pauses, and solo performances to trio work. In "Danny Boy" there is minimal brush work by drummer Shelly Manne; here we hear the trio emerging in full.


    Lucky to be Me: From Leonard Bernstein’s On the Town, now it’s time for Broadway and Hollywood. Marker loved musicals, and while filming Statues Also Die in London, he attended a 10 a.m. screening of An American in Paris daily. For every viewing, he was accompanied to Leicester Square by Alain Resnais.


    Peace Piece: In one of Evans’ most famous and alluring compositions, the air sparkles every time he caresses a key. This combines Evans’ enthusiasm for the impressionist composers with what has been called "practiced improvisation"—French culture meets Afro-American improvised music. This is where the heart of Marker’s compilation lies, when the music functions as a sequence of abstract images.


    My Man’s Gone Now: A piece from Porgy and Bess acts as a jump cut from a young, emerging Evans to one of his final recordings, made during a two-week residency at Ronnie Scott’s.


    Letter to Evan: The epistolary, another format which appealed to Marker. Written for Evans’ four-year-old son, whom the pianist seldom saw owing to his busy tour schedule, it has been reported that Evans added the following notes under the composition sheet: ‘There is a precious message contained in this song if you can hear it. And I won’t tell you twice."


    Time Remembered: The work of the filmmaker and the pianist are closest here, when one considers their obsessive commitment to remembrance as a force of life.


    All the Things You Are: A bit of a mystery. This track is incomplete and there's no supplementary information on the CD. My guess is that it's from volume 11 of The Complete Riverside Recordings.


    Your Story: Ravaged by drugs and less than two months away from an early death, Evans still managed to deliver some brilliant music. The closing song could be any listener’s story. Marker leaves space for self-identification.


    Playlist based on the original CD:



    Please note in some cases and in the absence of the recording identical to the one picked by Marker, I've chosen the closest version available on YouTube.

    The Houses They Lived In#1: George Cukor

    Ten Key Actresses of Iranian Cinema [by Nima Hasani-Nasab]

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    Originally commissioned by me and published in the Underline, the Iranian film critic Nima Hasani-Nasab has written about ten actresses who, in his view, helped shaping Iranian cinema before and after the revolution. — EK


    Apart from sheer acting talent and the entertainment they have given to different generations of Iranians, every one of the actresses profiled here is also a representative of her gender, and of a particular acting style. They range from much loved popular stars to those appreciated by a small and discerning minority of film devotees; some have taken on a variety of screen roles, while others have gladly reprised a favourite part many times. Some hold records for film credits; others have appeared in only a handful of films.

    Every one has put her own individual stamp on the world of cinema. To leave any one of them out would make any account of the key female performances in Iranian film incomplete. Still, it being necessary to include actresses from both before and after the 1979 Revolution, a number of prominent personalities who might otherwise have been included have had to be left out.

    This overview is dedicated to the memory of Ruhangiz Saminezhad, the first actress in the history of Iranian cinema, who paid for her performance in The Lor Girl with bitterness and curses; misfortune and loneliness – all so that Iranian women could take their rightful place on the cinema screen, take over from men in women’s clothing.



    Nadereh AKA Hamideh Kheir-Abadi

    Nadereh (1924-2010)

    Both before the Revolution, when performing under her stage name Nadereh, and afterwards when acting under her birthname, Hamideh Kheir-Abadi, she was associated above all with motherhood. The image of her as the stereotypical Iranian mother is part of the collective memory of Iranian moviegoers. Nadereh was the most prominent character actor in Iran and boasted a legendary performance record – almost 150 films and fifty television series in her half-century in front of the camera. She stuck to this same maternal role on screen from the age of 30. Nadereh had a remarkable ability to play the same type of role repeatedly while each time giving her characters unique life, as if each role were both fresh and familiar. Never have the tone and mannerisms of a traditional Iranian woman and mother been portrayed on cinema and television screens so accurately and memorably.

    Iren
    Iren (1927-2012)

    The Iranian-Armenian actress Iren began her career by chance, having been a substitute actress in Abdolhossein Noushin and Loreta Hairapedian Tabrizi’s theatre group. Along with a number of other theatre actors, she made the transition to cinema in the 1950s. Iren’s name is synonymous with fearlessness and the breaking of taboos relating to the presence of women in cinema. From her controversial appearance in The Messenger from Heaven in 1959, to her performance in the controversial film Mohallel in 1972, she made a lot of noise with the roles she created, experiencing success and making the news. With Moo Sorkheh and Speeding Naked Until Noon Iren became the embodiment of eroticism in Persian language cinema. She was the femme fatale of many Iranian crime films and melodramas. Her presence as an actor in both Iranian New Wave cinema and as a star of popular movies lasted for three decades but after the Revolution, with the banning of two films (The Reward and The Red Line) and the cutting of her scenes from the television series Hezar Dastan, Iren left the cinema forever. Her last appearance was alongside more than one hundred other actresses in Abbas Kiarostami’s 2008 film Shirin. Iren remained in Iran until her death.

    Forouzan
    Forouzan (1937-2016)

    This peerless star of two decades of Iranian cinema started out in the 1960s as a dubbing artist, but quickly found a place of her own on the screen. After creating sixty successful roles in the space of fifteen years, Forouzan’s name, more than any other, became representative of the Iranian actresses of the pre-Revolutionary period. Early on in her career, she conquered the box office in 1965 in Qarun’s Treasure alongside Mohammad Ali Fardin; they became the best-loved couple in Iranian cinema, as well as two of the most prominent and profitable faces in the country’s entertainment industry. What is striking is the diversity of the roles Forouzan played, and yet much of the time her great range as an actor was ignored. She is without doubt the most important actress in Iranian popular cinema. Her credits include The Dragon Gorge, Dancer of the City, The Dagger, Baba Shamal and Mina’s Circle, demonstrating her great intelligence in the choice of roles she took on. Forouzan also remained in Iran until her death.

    Banayi on the cover of Girls & Boys magazine
    Pouri Banayi (1940- )

    Pouri Banayi grabbed the public’s attention with her first film The Runaway Bride in 1964 and by 1978 had acted in nearly sixty films. This prominent and beloved actress of Iranian melodrama represented the gold standard when it came to depicting female characters in mainstream narrative cinema during that period. Despite her outright refusal to perform in the musical scenes common at the time, Banayi was able to remain a high-profile and beloved figure. She also acted in director Samuel Khachikian’s crime dramas, but her fame stems from her appearance in melodramas, in which she would play the role of girls and women in love and invariably wronged – two of the most famous of these were also directed by Khachikian (Goodbye Tehran and I Also Cried). Alongside the enduring personas she created in famous films like Qeysar, Banayi also gave striking performances in alternative Iranian films such as The Little Cannon, The Mandrake and Ghazal. After the Revolution, Banayi was not able to act and her only cinematic performance in the last forty years was in Shirin.

    Soosan Taslimi
    Soosan Taslimi (1950- )

    Despite a limited number of film appearances, the outstanding quality of her screen performances has meant that Soosan Taslimi has earned a reputation as one of the finest Iranian cinema actresses. A long artistic partnership with director Bahram Beyzai has meant that she has been able to carve out a space for the depiction of mythical and legendary characters, in a national cinema that is otherwise limited and lacking in variety. This stylish actress only had the opportunity to act for ten years in Iran, appearing in just six films and one television series. The difficulties women faced as actresses at the time led to her sudden emigration in 1987. Taslimi’s first two films were made just before the Revolution and were thus never screened in cinemas. Her performance in the screen adaptation of the play The Death of Yazdgerd is one of the pinnacles of the film actress’s art, while her performance in Bashu, the Little Stranger in which she speaks with a Gilaki accent, and her playing three parts in Perhaps Some Other Time are unrepeatable events in the history of women’s acting in Iran. Owing to her distinctive and unusual style, Taslimi was voted the best actress in the history of Iranian cinema in a Film Monthly critics’ poll in 2004. The fact that she has been absent from Iranian cinema for all these years has only confirmed her unique and irreplaceable status. Taslimi now lives in Sweden, where she has been active as an actress and filmmaker for many years.

    Googoosh
    Googoosh (1950- )

    Googosh’s fame in the world of Iranian pop music has always meant that her skills as an actor have been left in the shade. Few know that she became a singer many years after she began acting, appearing in almost thirty films in less than twenty years. Googoosh was not yet 10 years old when she came to cinema, having already frequently appeared on stage with her father, appearing in the films The Fugitive Angel and Fear and Hope in 1960. Her early films, though, are not particularly notable or well regarded. As Googoosh became a music star, however, she started to take acting more seriously and reached the height of her abilities. She made her reputation with two films by Jalal Moghaddam, The Three Madmen and Window. In the 1970s, up until the Revolution, she was both a standout figure in pop music and a star of the screen. The fact that Googoosh broke the mould with her cinematic performances was all the more laudable because it came at a time when all of Iran looked to her for inspiration in its fashion choices. She was innovative and daring in her portrayal of the very different characters in Bita, Nazanin and The Night of the Strangers. And appearing alongside Behrouz Vosoughi in Mamal the American, Travel Companion and Honeymoon she made up one half of the star couple of these 1970s box-office hits. Googoosh broke all box office records with the film Throughout the Night a year before the Revolution. After two decades of silence in Iran, she finally emigrated in 2000.

    Shohreh Aghdashloo
    Shohreh Aghdashloo (1952- )

    A special case, a woman whose name can be added to the list of great Iranian actresses despite only appearing in three films – two of which were made on the eve of the Revolution. Shohreh Aghdashloo had the good fortune to appear in memorable roles in masterpieces by two of the great Iranian directors, Abbas Kiarostami’s The Report and Ali Hatami’s Sooteh-Delan– as well as in the rather different The Chess of the Wind. Aghdashloo took on these golden opportunities with vitality, becoming a lasting part of Iran’s cinematic memory. In The Report she depicted a middle class Iranian woman at a time of transition, in a way not surpassed since and which became a model for many actresses after her. After the Revolution, not finding a place for herself in Iranian cinema, Aghdashloo emigrated, becoming an internationally recognised actress, appearing in a number of Hollywood films and television series. She was nominated for an Oscar for her role in House of Sand and Fog and won an Emmy for her part in House of Saddam.

    Fatemeh Motamed-Arya
    Fatemeh Motamed-Arya (1961- )

    Beginning her artistic career at the Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults as a puppeteer, Fatemeh Motamed-Arya moved swiftly on to film acting in the 1980s. During that decade and into the 1990s she became a well-known screen performer, giving vivid life to a variety of female characters, creating famous roles for most of the notable directors of the day. Despite being selective in her choice of roles, Motamed-Arya has appeared in nearly fifty films over the course of nearly four decades, her performances making her an outstanding example of the regard in which the acting profession is held, as well as a record holder for nominations and awards at the Fajr Film Festival. Motamed-Arya has striven to maintain the quality of her work throughout her career, choosing to avoid appearing in low quality productions. As a result, she has become an exemplary personality in the Iranian cinema industry. Her appearances in a number of popular films and television series, meanwhile, have meant that she has received both critical acclaim and widespread popularity. In the 2004 Film Monthly critics’ poll, Motamed-Arya was selected as one of the top five actresses in the country. In recent years she has become well known as a political and social activist. Meanwhile, her appearance in a film is usually a signal of that film’s quality.

    Hediyeh Tehrani
    Hediyeh Tehrani (1972- )

    The matchless cinema star of the 1990s and the first half of the 2000s, Hediyeh Tehrani was supposed to appear in a number of important films like The Day of the Event, To Be or Not To Be and Leila but none of these roles materialised. She finally made her film debut in 1996 with Soltan and immediately became much talked about. During the political ferment following the election of Mohammad Khatami as president in 1997, cinema needed women who were cool, bold and active and it found all these characteristics in Tehrani. For that very reason she quickly became a favourite with audiences as well as with critics and awards juries. For a decade Tehrani was a major star and her appearance in a film guaranteed its success, for example in Red, Hemlock and Unruled Paper. In the 2004 Film Monthly critics’ poll she was also chosen as one of the five best actresses. After years of success, Tehrani decided to change course and become an actress of arthouse cinema. Whereas previously she had found fame with films like Abadan and A Little Kiss, Tehrani now tried to present a different image of herself with films like Half Moon in 2006, and worked with Abbas Kiarostami on Shirin, leaving behind her role as the beloved star of box office pleasing melodrama – albeit without similar success. Tehrani’s star seemed to be on the wane, until she once again enjoyed widespread acclaim with Asghar Farhadi’s Fireworks Wednesday.

    Leila Hatami in A Separation
    Leila Hatami (1972- )

    As a child Leila Hatami first experienced life in front of the camera in her father’s film Kamal ol-Molk, produced in 1984, but it was almost another decade before she first became known as an actress, first of all in 1992’s The Love-Stricken and then with her memorable performance in Leila. By whatever criterion may be adopted, Hatami has been a standout actress of Iranian cinema over the past two decades. She has been the first choice for all Iranian filmmakers and has a long list of awards and honours to her name, received both at home and abroad. Given membership of the Légion d’Honneur of the French Republic, receiving the Best Actress award at the Berlin Film Festival, appearing at the Oscars ceremony for her role in A Separation, and having participated as a member of jury at Cannes, Hatami is now the most important Iranian female cinematic personality on the world stage. Although she has not appeared in any box office smash hits, Hatami’s personality, her scrupulous choice of roles and the quality of her work in recent years mean that she has enjoyed much recognition and raised the standard of acting in Iranian cinema.


    The State of Cinema in Iran, 1933

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    Only 6 cinemas in Iran could show sound films in 1933


    From The 1934 Film Daily Year Book, a report on the state of cinema in Persia AKA Iran.



    Agitation: None.

    Censorship: Active and strict censorship of all films to be shown in Persia is maintained by the Amusement Section of the Imperial Police. All films are shown before a board of Police Officers at whose discretion the entire film or parts of it may be rejected. The following scenes are usually barred from films to be shown in Persia:
    (a) Any scenes reflecting directly or indirectly on Shah.
    (b) Scenes containing political propaganda.
    (c) Scenes depicting the horrors of war, suggesting pacifism, or inciting to revolution.
    (d) Scenes thought to be detrimental to public morals.


    Competition: German films predominate in the Persian motion picture theaters, while French, American, English and Soviet follow in the order named.

    Copyright Relations: There is no provision under Persian law granting the exclusive right to exhibit a motion picture film. Pirated films and in some instances two copies of the same film have been imported, followed by a futile appeal to the Police for protection. A civil suit now being conducted by an American company against an importer of pirated films may be of assistance in establishing a helpful precedent.

    Production: One film has been produced locally.

    Taxes: A tax of 10% is usually collected on tickets. There is an import duty of 5% ad valorem on films purchased, and a duty of 5% of the rental fee on films leased for showing in Persia.

    Theaters: There are, it is reported, 30 motion picture theaters in Persia, of which 12 are in Teheran.

    Sound: There are 6 theaters in Persia wired for sound.


    Among the Living (Stuart Heisler, 1941)

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    Click to enlarge


    Playing on 35mm at Il Cinema Ritrovato 2020

    Albert Maltz on This Gun for Hire

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    This Gun for Hire (Frank Tuttle, 1942) [Photo: LIFE Magazine]

    Interviewed by Joel Gardner between 1975 and 1979 for an oral history series by the University of California. As a part of Guns for Hire: Frank Tuttle vs. Stuart Heisler retrospective, This Gun for Hire will be playing at Il Cinema Ritrovato, Bologna, August 26, 9:15 AM, Cine Jolly.

    ***

    The financial squeeze that I [was in] became too great in the spring of 1941. My friends Michael Blankfort and George Sklar had gotten work in Hollywood, and we made the decision that I would try also. And as soon as teaching was over, I went out to Las Vegas, New Mexico, because my mother-in-law was ill and my wife had taken our son out there earlier. And then after a few days I went overnight by bus to Los Angeles. And I, for about ten days, slept on a couch in the tiny cottage that the Sklars had. Although he was working, they had not yet accumulated enough money to move into anything better than the very simple little quarters that they had. 

    By luck I got a job very quickly. The film director Frank Tuttle had a piece of material--had a novel, actually, by Graham Greene called This Gun for Hire which had been owned by Paramount, and he had worked out a way in which the story might be done which was acceptable. He wanted a  writer just at the time that I came into town and heard about me and knew my work, and I got the job at $300 a week.


    I worked for the first several months up at the home of director Frank Tuttle, who lived in a very large house in the Hollywood Hills; not only a large house with large grounds, it had a swimming pool but also had a very large poolside place where there was a gym and where guests could dress and undress and so on. And it was there that a table was set up and I worked. Now, I had come [to] Los Angeles with one suit only, which was a very heavy green tweed suit. It was wonderful for the New York winters. But when I hit Los Angeles in June, the weather was warm, and Frank Tuttle was out on the side of his pool just in a pair of swim trunks taking the sun. And while I would take off my jacket, and I'd take off my tie, I was still sitting in this heavy pair of  tweed trousers. And Frank would say, "Why do you wear such a warm suit?" And I would say, "Oh, I'm not warm." And it occurs to me that I could have borrowed money from George Sklar or Michael Blankfort for a new suit; why I didn't, I don't know. But I went through this comedy until money accumulated and I was able to get some clothes and an apartment and a car. 

    Albert Maltz

    For me, until the blacklist came, Hollywood was a blessing. It was the way in which I could finance my  serious writing while meeting my other obligations: one child, and then a second in 1942, and a wife with heavy medical and psychoanalytic bills, who was in bed ill for half of each year from 1939 until 1950. If it had not been for Hollywood, I would have had to try and catch on in radio or in some work unrelated to writing. And on the whole I was also fortunate in the film work I got. Most of it was interesting. I worked at it as hard as I could, and I did well at it. My ability to save money earned in film writing also freed me to work at novels with no concern whatsoever for anything except my subject. Farthest from my mind was whether or not the novel might become a film. Now, this was not necessarily true of others, but it was true of me. 

    From the time that I began work in the middle of the year with Frank Tuttle, things went like this: the treatment for the story was accepted by the head of the studio and a producer was assigned to the project. The producer was the one who would work with the writer on the script, so that my first work with Tuttle was an unusual situation. Usually, in the setup at that time the producer would finish the script with the writer, the writer would then leave the studio, and the director would come in; and the writer and the director might have no contact whatsoever. And then it would be the producer with the director who would cast, and the producer would supervise the shooting, and the producer would have the last say on the cutting. But it was a sign of the fact that a project had become a reality, was going into screenplay, that a producer was assigned to it. 

    Frank Tuttle in the mid-30s [Photo: John Kobal Collection]

    An amusing little thing happened on This Gun for Hire. The head of the studio at that time was a Broadway character  by the name of Buddy DeSilva, who had been in the musical comedy field in New York. He knew the field of musical comedy, but I think little else. And he was afraid that I might not be able to write a sound screenplay so that, without waiting for my first screenplay, he hired a Warner  Brothers writer who had done some fine scripts at Warner Brothers, W. R. Burnett, and Burnett did me a marvelous turn. As I would write sequences of the screenplay, they would be sent to Burnett for revision. He would look at them and perhaps change a word and then send them back, untouched, and he did this for the whole screenplay. He got a joint screenplay credit for this because it was written into his contract that he had to get one. And at that time there wasn't the arbitration machinery in the Writers Guild which would have permitted me to protest this. But I was grateful to him because I didn't have the problem of wrangling with another man's taste. The usual practice of a second writer on a script like that  is to try and change the script so that it will be his own. 

    Alan Ladd (Raven) carrying a passed out Veronica Lake (Ellen) in a scene from This Gun for Hire

    The screenplay was completed at the end of September, and Alan Ladd, who had had a few small parts in films but had been noticed by Frank Tuttle, the director, was cast in it, and a passing sensation, Veronica Lake, was cast in the female part. The film went into production within about two weeks of the script having been finished, which was most unusual. I was assigned to be on the set because they had nothing else for me to do, actually, and I found this both useful in the learning process but essentially boring. And since I was not interested in becoming a director, I spent as much time as I could reading in the historical materials for my novel. 

    [In] the case of Frank Tuttle and myself there was a harmony of attitude, and in order to make This Gun for Hire work when changed from the English scene to the American scene, and changed in the year-period, we found it necessary to make use, I believe, of a munitions maker who was a fascist in his general outlook. I don't remember the story very well. But we did that because we were seeking a motivation for what happened in the story, and we were not doing it because we wanted to try and say something politically. Actually, any writer, of whatever political or human persuasion, cannot help but write out of what is in his head and his heart.


    Text courtesy of the University of California.

    André Breton on Sadegh Hedayat's The Blind Owl

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    Sadegh Hedayat

    Nasturtiums Purple

    Of Sadegh Hedayat, who committed suicide in Paris on April 9th, 1951, reached us, in the beautiful translation of Roger Lescot, The Blind Owl, a hopeless sign in the night. Never more such a dramatic apprehension of the human condition has aroused such an examination  of our shell, nor such a knowledge of  timeless struggle in a maze of mirrors, with the attributes that are our common lot ... The acuity of the sensations and the violence of the impulses which like  Wölfli, make a confounding use of certain stereotyped images, gasping from one end to the other, those that Hedayat excludes from the world of the "scoundrel". A Masterpiece if any! A book that must find its place near the Aurelia of Nerval, the Gradiva of Jensen, the Mysteries of Hamsun, which takes part in the phosphorescence of Berkeley Square and the prisons of Nosferatu. (Jose Corti Library). A. B. [André Breton]



    Sincere thanks to Rym Quartsi for the translation from original French.


    The Negro Soldier (Stuart Heisler, 1944)

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    An African American artist in The Negro Soldier

    This film is considered a “watershed in the use of film to promote racial tolerance”, and Heisler had previously handled the subject with surprisingly fine results in his 1940 The Biscuit Eater. Hollywood showed little interest in the subject of race, apart from work by those communist writers such as Lester Cole (None Shall Escape) and John Howard Lawson (Sahara) who gave African Americans a voice as agents of democracy in the fight against fascism. However, The Negro Soldier was perhaps the only film in that vein written by an African American, Carlton Moss. Films about the black experience were either ‘churchy’ or ‘bluesy’ (a rare exception, King Vidor’s 1929 Hallelujah! was both). The Negro Soldier is churchy (even if it does include a fleeting shot of the father of the blues, W.C. Handy), adopting the form of a sermon, in which the history of African Americans’ involvement in the making of America is recounted to an entirely black audience. But when the familiar image of the church minister at the pulpit arrives, it delivers a twofold punch: it is Moss himself – and the book in his hands is Mein Kampf, from which he reads Hitler’s perspective on the black race. The church form finds new urgency, as the film’s writer merges roles with that of the minister. Heisler makes his point visually, to avoid preaching: at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, the German and Japanese athletes fail and an African American wins; a black conductor leads a mixed orchestra through Beethoven’s 9th Symphony. 

    Stuart Heisler (left) on the set of The Negro Soldier

    Combining footage from fiction films, recreations of real events and newsreels, Heisler and Moss’s take on racial tolerance was perhaps too much for the Army: they demanded that some scenes be cut, such as one in which a black officer commands the troops, and another in which a white nurse massages a black soldier. That didn’t stop African American soldiers and the black press from admiring the film as a step towards a dignified image of their people on screen. — Ehsan Khoshbakht

    The father of the blues, W.C. Handy in The Negro Soldier

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