|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, September 24, 2000 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Entertainment
| Next
Daring film-maker
Iranian director Jafar Panahi started his film career as a
television film maker. His directorial debut 'The White Balloon'
won the famous Camera d'Or at the Cannes. In an interview with
GOWRI RAMNARAYAN, he speaks with passion of his most recent film
'Dayereh', which deals with gender discrimination in Iran's
patriarchal society.
SCREAMS of childbirth accompany the roll of credit titles. An
aperture opens on the wall in a hospital ward to announce the
birth of a girl. "But the ultrasound declared it would be a boy!"
cries the maternal grandmother. Would her daughter be divorced
for failing to produce a male child?
No,this familiar scene is set not in India as it well could have
been, but in Iran, where young mother Solmaz Gholami becomes the
archetypal victim of gender bias in patriarchal societies from
the dawn of time, which continues to exist in most parts of the
modern world, differing only in degree. Though named only at the
start and finish, Solamaz haunts you all the more as an unseen
presence on the visual medium, imaging those undergoing the same
fate, but not always or entirely without hope of deliverance
through individual protest and rebellion.
Iranian film maker Jafar Panahi, winner of the Golden Lion for
the Best Film at the 57th International Film Festival Venice
(September 2000) for his "Dayereh" (The Circle/Farsi/91 mins),
has shown extraordinary courage in making a film of this kind,
stark, hard, unflinching, with a gruff empathy for the eight
women he follows through a day and night in their wanderings
through the city. Pari, Arezou, Nargess, Solmaz, Elham, Monir,
Nayereh, Mojgan - their names spell uplifting, lyrical beauty
meaning Angel, Hope, Flower, Eternal... (Intriguing to note that
many of the actors have the same first names as the characters.
Another kind of chilling realism?)
The common thread? The women have been released (or have escaped)
from prison, only to be spurned by their families. Their crimes
are unspecified. Perhaps they are not crimes at all but
transgressions of chauvinistic rules by spirited women of
different age groups. "From the artistic point of view it is not
necessary to know just why these women were put behind bars.
That's another film that I don't wish to make," says Panahi.
"What's important is that they have left a smaller prison to
enter a larger prison, and to analyse their condition there. A
problem which seems to have no solutions."
The film is full of paradoxes. It fits an episodic grid within a
circular movement. Its strong, singular tone is built up by many
distinct voices. "This form grew out of my need to say what I had
to say, to hold the content. I wanted a whole made up of
distinct, integrated parts. I hit upon it by thinking of a relay
race. These women were doing just that, one taking up where the
other left off. To succeed, all must succeed. If one slackens,
they all lose the race," said Panahi, in his interview to The
Hindu, after the screening of "Dayereh", before he could know
that the film was going to sweep up six awards at the festival,
including the Fipresci Prize from an international jury of film
critics, and the Unicef Award. Though his eyes were hidden behind
dark glasses, and his speech reduced to flatness in the
translator's struggle to maintain accuracy, Panahi's hands and
voice revealed the passion which fired him to make so daring a
film.
The story is seemingly simple. From the fear aroused by the
unwanted, newborn girl child, we move to two young women released
from prison, rushing through the streets, subjected to male
heckling, irked by not being able to smoke in public. Sweet,
naive Nargess, who retains her ideals, dreams of love and
marriage, wants to return to Rezilique, her childhood paradise.
An idyllic painting in the bazaar leads to more fantasies. (Later
she buys a shirt for her "fiance" who may not exist except in her
rosy mind). The older, protective Arezou finds the money for the
fare through questionable means but refuses to accompany her on
the journey of disillusionment. Without an ID card or a male
escort, Nargess has to lie through her teeth to get a bus ticket
to leave the city.
Unmarried Pari has escaped from prison desperate for abortion.
But she is kicked out of her home by brothers, and deserted by
friend Elham who dare not bring Pari to her Pakistani husband's
notice lest he discover her questionable past. Elham's security
in job and marriage depends on the concealment of her prison
record. That is why she has not visited her in-laws in Lahore. A
visa application would pull her bluff. (Ironically, she is the
only woman to appear in white; her "purity" has been bought with
nail-biting deception.)
Pari encounters a released prison mate in Monir, who now lives
with a husband and his wife "Number Two", to whom her own
daughter has become more attached. Nayereh is another unfortunate
who tries to abandon her little girl on the streets in the hope
that the child may find a better life in a more secure and
affluent home. In a state of acute distress, she accepts a lift
from an unknown male driver, an act that cannot but land her in
further trouble. Sharp-tongued Mojgan battles for survival in a
world where hypocrisy and corruption assume self-righteousness in
condemning her open prostitution.
In this collective feminine world, "all the women make up a
single character at different stages of time, and phases of
development," explains Panahi. "We follow Nargess (the youngest)
in search of her own utopia with a hand held camera and open lens
in day light. But step by step, when we reach the end of the
film, we see older characters through darker spaces and the
lenses closed much more."
Each character trails the one who comes after, in fact she
becomes the next character in a progression of experience. The
prison connection implies radical significations. "As you can
see, all these characters are trying to flout the law, not to
follow what is generally accepted," says Panahi. "Ninety per cent
of my characters in this film have not accepted what is going on
around them. Only the prostitute in the last sequence is more
relaxed than the others because she has accepted the social
condition in which she finds herself." Every woman lives with
fear, but the unsentimental camera also shows how they refuse to
let it stifle their fight.
A film like "Dayereh" cannot be seen from an aesthetic point of
view alone. That such a film has been made at all, and by a male
director, is a sign of hope. It depicts a totalitarian system of
summary executions which nevertheless cannot suppress the evils
of crime and prostitution, or unrest individual and political.
The constant surveillance on the street which the film reflects
with mounting tension, is a daunting off-screen factor as well.
The director did talk about the need to be acute and clever in
making the best of things and securing co-operation for the
outdoor location shooting. The screenplay was passed by the State
censoring commission, got some State funding, and a co-producer
in Italy.
No, it has not been screened in Iran yet. In fact the
government's green signal for entering it in the competition
section at the Venice film festival came just three days before
the stipulated date. "But now I don't want to talk about the
difficulties in making this film," Panahi announces firmly,
adding that his is not the first film to denounce the social
climate in his country, but perhaps the others were "not
aesthetic enough in their protests to be chosen by foreign
festivals".
At the open press meet, Panahi had said that his task was not to
find solutions to social problems but "to recount what he saw
clearly and genuinely," to enquire into the causes of distress,
to be honest in his transmission.
"I don't see life as a prisonhouse for women," he replied when I
asked him about the image of the tiny window which opens and
closes at the beginning (you are outside in the hospital ward and
hear the announcement of birth), and end (you are inside the cell
with mute women as the male guard shuts the window on them). "But
I believe that human beings are confined within circles
everywhere, the only difference lies in the size of the
circumference. History testifies to their existence at all times.
I also believe that geography impacts on these circles. For
instance, Iran is hemmed in by countries like Afghanistan and
Iraq, and it's closed society is partly the result of such
geographical features."
What about religion? "In my country, religion is intermingled
with politics and this influences all aspects of life, even in
details. You see this in my characters. History also shows that
whenever religion has gone the wrong way, it has had some very
negative impact. But I don't want to talk about such matters."
Panahi did talk about the sparks which flamed into "Dayereh". The
immediate stimulus came from a bland press report about a woman
who committed suicide after killing her two daughters, without
disclosing the reasons for the desperate act. "My wife delivered
our second child in the afternoon even as I was presenting my
dissertation at the university. I rushed to the hospital. I had a
son by then and thought my family was now complete with the new
born girl child, but my mother was very upset. Her reaction has
stayed with me for 12 years. It has gone into the film."
The film maker hopes that the overwhelming response from an
international audience and media in Venice will have its positive
impact on Iranian film making in general, and on the response to
"Dayereh" in his own country. The first light note came when he
added, "The best thing of course would be for the political
developments in Iran to make my film obsolete. I hope it it gets
outdated very soon!"
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Entertainment Next : Taking fans on a musical trip | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2000 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|