Kandahar (film)

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Kandahar
Directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Produced by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Written by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Starring Nelofer Pazira
Hassan Tantai
Sadou Teymouri
Hoyatala Hakimi
Dawud Salahuddin: the medic
Music by Mohammad Reza Darvishi
Cinematography Ebrahim Ghafori
Editing by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Distributed by Avatar Films
Release date(s) 2001
Running time 85 min.
Country Iran/France
Language Persian/English/Pashtu/Polish
IMDb profile

Kandahar (originally titled Safar-e Ghandehar ("Journey to Kandahar") and, alternatively, (The Sun Behind the Moon) is a 2001 film by Iranian director Mohsen Makhmalbaf, set in Afghanistan during the rule of the Taliban. The film is based on a story (partly true, partly fictionalized) of a successful Afghan-Canadian (played by Nelofer Pazira) who returns to Afghanistan after receiving a letter from her sister, who was left behind when the family escaped, that she plans on committing suicide on the last solar eclipse of the millennium.

Kandahar was filmed mostly in Iran, but also secretly in Afghanistan itself[citation needed]. Most people, including Nelofer Pazira, played themselves. The film premiered at the Cannes film festival of 2001, but didn't get much attention at first. After 9/11, however, it was widely shown.

Kandahar won Makhmalbaf the Federico Fellini Prize from Unesco in 2001.

[edit] Plot

Hidden behind a burka, Nafas, the sister from Canada, makes her way across the border with a family of refugees. When they are robbed by brigands and the family turns back, she decides to continue on her way, accompanied first by a young boy who was just expelled from a Qur'anic school, and then by an African American convert to Islam, who has become disillusioned with the turn the country has taken under the Taliban.

As the film proceeds, Nafas learns more and more about the hardships women face under the Taliban, and even more so, how years of war have destroyed Afghan society. Her African American guide, hidden behind a false beard, points out to her that the only technological progress allowed in the country is weaponry. As they wander the countryside, Nafas records her impressions into a portable tape recorder hidden beneath her veils. She sees children robbing corpses to survive, people fighting over artificial limbs that they might need in case they walk through a minefield, and doctors who examine female patients from behind a curtain with a hole in it.

Nafas never reaches her sister. When her African American guide turns back, because he is afraid to enter the city of Kandahar, she follows a guide who had just scammed a pair of artificial legs out of the Red Cross. Dressed in burkas, the pair join a wedding party which is stopped by the Taliban because they are playing musical instruments and singing--forbidden by Afghan law. Her guide is taken away and she is unveiled. Captured, she seems destined to fall into the same kind of life that she hoped to help her sister escape.

[edit] Trivia

The film stars Dawud Salahuddin (also known as David Belfield), an American-born convert to Islam who in 1980 assassinated an Iranian dissident and ex-diplomat at the behest of the newly-formed Islamic Republic of Iran's intelligence authorities. Salahuddin, currently in exile in Iran, played the protagonist's American-born guide. The sound track of the film repeatedly features a Hindu prayer song with Sanskrit lyrics, which bears no relevance to an Islamic society in which the plot is set.

[edit] External links