Reviews

CRCulver

August 22, 2018
5.0
The director Mohsen Makhmalbaf made a number of acclaimed films in his native Iran over the Eighties and Nineties, but with the 1998 effort SOKOUT ("Silence") he moved farther afield for his shooting location: Tajikistan, where the locals speak a Persian dialect mostly intelligible to Iranians, but the culture is an exotic mix of Central Asian and Soviet traditions. Khorshid (Tahmineh Normatova), a blind boy aged around 10, is employed in the workshop of an instrument maker, tuning the instruments. His mother (Goibibi Ziadolahyeva), abandoned by her husband, urges him to work hard, for their landlord is demanding the rent and threatening eviction. Unfortunately, Khorshid is particularly prone to arriving late at work because he is easily distracted from his commute by the sound of music coming from the radio or street musicians. Nadereh (Nadereh Abdelahyeva), the adopted daughter of the instrument maker, tries to keep Khorshid out of trouble. This is a mystical film, by which Khorshid's desire to follow the beauty of music above all else serves as a metaphor for the renunciant's search for God. However, that mystical point is made quite subtly, and I suspect most audiences outside the region won't pick up on it. What will strike most foreign viewers is the beautiful imagery and soundtrack. Filming outside Iran in a country with less strict dress codes, Makhmalbaf's camera focuses heavily on female faces and the colourful floral prints of Dushabe's women. In Nadereh and another young cast member he captures that brief moment where girlhood gives way to womanhood. We hear a number of musical instruments from Central Asia, but besides the local folk music the dramatic opening of Beethoven's Fifth figures prominently, tying this exotic locale to a more universal ideal. Things are not entirely rosy, however. The innocence of the children is juxtaposed at a few points with the gritty reality of post-Soviet Tajikistan, now recovering from a bloody civil war and marked by poverty, child labour, and a reborn religious extremism. The running time is short at 72 minutes, which might disappoint some. Also, Makhmalbaf chose non-professionals to play the roles, and their lines are often delivered somewhat woodenly. However, such wooden dialog may have been desirable to the director, as that slow speech makes the film easier for his native Iranian audience to understand. Still, while not a major masterpiece, this is a visually and musically attractive film and worth watching for anyone wanting a slice of Central Asian drama (or at least one Iranian director's vision of it).

Recommendation Movies

6.6
Horror
View
6.6
Criminal Lovers
Criminal Lovers1999
5.8
Drama
View
5.8
Her Smell
Her Smell2019
7
Drama
View
7
The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner
The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner2008
5.8
Comedy
View
5.8
The Killing Game
The Killing Game1967
7.9
Drama
View
7.9
Raise the Red Lantern
Raise the Red Lantern1991
7.4
Drama
View
7.4
Breathe
Breathe2017
7.1
Drama
View
7.1
The Spanish Apartment
The Spanish Apartment2002
8.5
Comedy
View
8.5
Parasite
Parasite2019
8.4
Adventure
View
8.4
Interstellar
Interstellar2014
8.2
Crime
View
8.2
Joker
Joker2019
8.4
Drama
View
8.4
Fight Club
Fight Club1999
7.5
Action
View
7.5
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings2021
7.3
Comedy
View
7.3
Palm Springs
Palm Springs2020
7.5
Thriller
View
7.5
Anatomy of a Fall
Anatomy of a Fall2023
7.1
Action
View
7.1
Tenet
Tenet2020
7.8
Drama
View
7.8
Little Women
Little Women2019
6.9
Drama
View
6.9
The Platform
The Platform2019
7.5
Crime
View
7.5
BlacKkKlansman
BlacKkKlansman2018
7.5
Drama
View
7.5
The Lighthouse
The Lighthouse2019
6.3
Drama
View
6.3
The Little Things
The Little Things2021
© 2024 MoovieTime. All rights reserved.Made with Nuxt