The Circle (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Circle
Directed by Jafar Panahi
Produced by Jafar Panahi
Written by Kambuzia Partovi
Starring Nargess Mamizadeh
Maryiam Palvin Almani
Mojgan Faramarzi
Elham Saboktakin
Monir Arab
Solmaz Panahi
Fereshteh Sadr Orfani
Fatemeh Naghavi
Cinematography Bahram Badakshani
Editing by Jafar Panahi
Distributed by Artificial Eye
WinStar Cinema
Release date(s) Flag of Italy 6 September 2000 (premiere at VFF)
Flag of United States 13 April 2001
Flag of United Kingdom 21 September 2001
Flag of Australia 7 March 2002
Running time 90 min
Country Iran
Switzerland
Italy
Language Persian
Budget $10,000 (estimated)
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Circle (Persian: Dayereh‎) is a 2000 drama film by Iranian independent filmmaker Jafar Panahi that criticizes the treatment of women in Iran. The film has won several awards, including the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 2000, but it is banned in Iran.

Contents

[edit] Structure

The film does not have a central protagonist: instead, it is constructed around a sequence of short interconnecting stories that illustrate the everyday challenges women face in Iran. Each story intersects, but none is complete, leaving the viewer to imagine both the background and the ending. All the actors are amateurs, except Fereshteh Sadr Orafai who plays Pari, and Fatemeh Naghavi, who plays the mother abandoning her daughter. [1]

Throughout the movie, Panahi focuses on the little rules symbolizing difficulties of life for Iranian women, such as the need to wear a chador under certain circumstances, or not being allowed to travel alone. He frequently uses contrast to illustrate both happiness and misery in contemporary Tehran: for example, a marriage party, symbolizing a happy ending, takes place in the background while a young girl is abandoned.

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The film begins in a maternity ward of a hospital, where the mother of Solmaz Gholami is upset to learn that her daughter has just given birth to a girl, even though the ultrasound indicated that the baby would be a boy. Worrying that her in-laws will force their son to divorce her daughter, she tells another daughter to call her uncles.

At the phone booth, she runs into three prisoners, including Arezou and Nargess, who have just been released. They are trying to come up with money so that they can go to Nargess's home village. The third prisoner is immediately arrested, as she tries to pawn a gold chain, leaving just the two women. Arezou eventually finds enough money to get Nargess a bus ticket, and the two of them separate.

At the bus station, however, Nargess can't get on the bus, because it is being searched, and she is afraid that she will be arrested again. Instead she tries to find another prisoner, Pari, who sneaked out of the prison that day. Pari's father will not let her in the house, however, and just as she leaves, Pari's two brothers appear to "talk" to their sister. She manages to escape, and eventually makes her way to a hospital where she finds Elham, another former prisoner who has hidden her past and is now a nurse, married to a doctor.

From her conversation with Elham, we learn that Pari is pregnant, but the father of her baby has been executed, and she has no one to approve her having an abortion. Elham, after being released, became too conservative to do anything to help her, so Pari is left to wander the streets at night. Without ID, she cannot get into a hotel. At a street corner, she finds a mother trying to abandon her little girl, hoping that she will find a better life with a family. She continues wandering the street.

The mother is first caught as a prostitute, but she later manages to escape. Then another woman who was picked up as a prostitute, is taken to prison. She is placed in a cell with other women we met so far in the movie, and the phone rings outside the metal door. A guard answers and comes to the window, calling for Solmaz Gholami, the woman with a girl baby in the first scene. So is the circle closed.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Interview with Jafar Panahi on the Fox Lorber DVD.

[edit] External link(s)

Preceded by
Not One Less
Golden Lion winner
2000
Succeeded by
Monsoon Wedding
Cinema of Iran

Actors • Directors • Films A-Z • Chronology of films • Cinematographers • Iranian New Wave • Producers • Screenwriters •

In other languages