Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Acted as a drama, paced like a ritual, filmed as a slice of rural Iranian life.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Maryam Shahriar
Cast
Altinay Ghelich Taghani,
Soghra Karimi,
Zahra Mohammadi,
Habib Haddad
Genre
Drama
Amangol (Altinay Ghelich Taghani) is the eldest daughter in a poor rural family. To help support them, her head is shaven and begins work as a boy named Aman in an isolated carpet weaving shop. The girls who work there are beaten by the owner, as is Aman, toiling at the loom until their hands bleed. As a male apprentice, he supervises the girls and lives in the shop, locked in and isolated.
We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Acted as a drama, paced like a ritual, filmed as a slice of rural Iranian life.
New York Post by V.A. Musetto
There’s little dialogue in this gem of a movie, but little is needed. Aman’s anguished face – which recalls Maria Falconetti in “The Passion of Joan of Arc” -- conveys all the information we need.
The A.V. Club by Keith Phipps
Never quite finds the rhythm of a great film, and it scores no points for subtlety by including a subplot about a horse breaking free of its master, but Shahriar displays a real gift for conveying Taghani's plight in all its grimness.
Chicago Reader by Ted Shen
At times Shahriar succumbs to self-conscious poeticism, and her male characters are invariably thieves and oppressors, but the film draws a good deal of power from the passive anguish of the girl.
Village Voice by Laura Sinagra
The filmmaker achieves the desired sense of remoteness and claustrophobic doom, and though the story could be told more economically, her slow approach conveys the distended chronology that attends an indentured servitude resembling slavery.
The New York Times by Dave Kehr
With her shaved head and staring eyes, Aman actually looks as if she had been stripped entirely of her sexuality, like a Holocaust victim. What does seem certain is that a bootleg print of "Yentl" is still making its way through Iran's filmmaking underground, leaving a wide trail of influence behind it.
Variety by Eddie Cockrell
A plea for attention to despicable conditions of female servitude in contempo Iran.
Loading recommendations...
Loading recommendations...