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Fireworks Wednesday(چهارشنبه سوری)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Iran · 2006
1h 42m
Director Asghar Farhadi
Starring Hamid Farrokhnejad, Hedie Tehrani, Tarane Alidousti, Pantea Bahram
Genre Drama

The day before a married couple are set to vacation in Dubai, the wife enlists a housekeeper named Rouhi to help clean their house. Rouhi soon learns she is here to not only clean, but gather information for the wife on her husband’s potential mistress. Over the course of the day new details emerge.

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What are critics saying?

90

Village Voice by

It proves to be not just interesting in how it foreshadows the filmmaker's more mature works, but also a gripping piece of storytelling in its own right.

83

The A.V. Club by A.A. Dowd

Fireworks Wednesday carefully, organically introduces its characters, then lets the audience try to discern what they’re withholding.

60

Time Out by Ben Kenigsberg

[Farhadi and cowriter Mani Haghighi] prove to be stronger on atmosphere than on structure, aided by crisp, unnerving camerawork.

100

Variety by Deborah Young

Few Iranian films have tried to realistically depict both the urban middle and lower classes, and fewer still with the complexity of story telling and depth of characterization in Asghar Farhadi’s impressive third feature, Fireworks Wednesday.

88

RogerEbert.com by Godfrey Cheshire

As [Farhadi] does to such masterful effect in “A Separation,” here he constructs a story that keeps revealing new thematic and psychological layers, ones that often come to light through the shifting of perspective from one character to another, a technique that deepens our sympathy for the people we’re watching to the point of our realizing that, as in Renoir, “everyone has their reasons.”

80

CineVue by Patrick Gamble

As with all of Farhadi's films there's a frailty behind his characters, with their insecurities and moral dilemmas bubbling to the surface as the director slowly raises the temperature in this pressure cooker of domestic strife. Nervous editing and sinuous cinematography also give the impression that Farhadi is choreographing his stars rather than directing them.

80

The Guardian by Paul MacInnes

This is a thoroughly engrossing and densely textured drama, showing Farhadi's cool skill in dissecting the Iranian middle classes and the unhappiness of marriage.

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