Dubai Telegraph - War risks choking Iran's world-beating cinema, warn directors

EUR -
AED 4.260692
AFN 73.090158
ALL 95.303638
AMD 426.658138
ANG 2.077221
AOA 1065.027014
ARS 1621.011522
AUD 1.627484
AWG 2.090899
AZN 1.975314
BAM 1.954251
BBD 2.335979
BDT 142.538248
BGN 1.937375
BHD 0.437461
BIF 3453.932523
BMD 1.16016
BND 1.484436
BOB 8.014682
BRL 5.816921
BSD 1.159796
BTN 111.518529
BWP 15.719405
BYN 3.175011
BYR 22739.144172
BZD 2.332661
CAD 1.597413
CDF 2614.418039
CHF 0.914502
CLF 0.026468
CLP 1041.696471
CNY 7.890834
CNH 7.894735
COP 4322.943339
CRC 524.590974
CUC 1.16016
CUP 30.744251
CVE 110.177195
CZK 24.292829
DJF 206.534513
DKK 7.473139
DOP 68.316733
DZD 153.727128
EGP 61.371792
ERN 17.402406
ETB 186.987893
FJD 2.558328
FKP 0.863228
GBP 0.864378
GEL 3.103443
GGP 0.863228
GHS 13.396439
GIP 0.863228
GMD 84.114274
GNF 10167.896754
GTQ 8.843952
GYD 242.645579
HKD 9.089682
HNL 30.848947
HRK 7.533964
HTG 151.821624
HUF 360.440973
IDR 20533.679219
ILS 3.383061
IMP 0.863228
INR 111.788243
IQD 1519.415304
IRR 1532513.902374
ISK 143.394689
JEP 0.863228
JMD 182.625245
JOD 0.822548
JPY 184.647637
KES 149.729834
KGS 101.455948
KHR 4657.268346
KMF 493.068092
KPW 1044.132636
KRW 1750.03219
KWD 0.359104
KYD 0.966526
KZT 546.476265
LAK 25418.961606
LBP 103862.122927
LKR 400.712382
LRD 212.249934
LSL 19.218684
LTL 3.425652
LVL 0.701769
LYD 7.375122
MAD 10.716659
MDL 20.116881
MGA 4871.159944
MKD 61.618997
MMK 2436.323714
MNT 4151.904991
MOP 9.359601
MRU 46.033314
MUR 54.910291
MVR 17.877795
MWK 2011.088607
MXN 20.127333
MYR 4.597714
MZN 74.130012
NAD 19.218932
NGN 1590.916396
NIO 42.686901
NOK 10.706946
NPR 178.425036
NZD 1.98066
OMR 0.44608
PAB 1.159786
PEN 3.957931
PGK 5.057969
PHP 71.462418
PKR 322.980395
PLN 4.248742
PYG 7155.297627
QAR 4.22893
RON 5.242992
RSD 117.395439
RUB 82.226758
RWF 1701.436717
SAR 4.355408
SBD 9.303827
SCR 15.478209
SDG 696.678461
SEK 10.860784
SGD 1.485075
SHP 0.866177
SLE 28.56893
SLL 24327.986305
SOS 662.868874
SRD 43.047701
STD 24012.978276
STN 24.480912
SVC 10.147913
SYP 128.261533
SZL 19.212771
THB 37.914053
TJS 10.774667
TMT 4.072163
TND 3.396907
TOP 2.793388
TRY 52.920368
TTD 7.866731
TWD 36.624753
TZS 3016.420543
UAH 51.291324
UGX 4387.560087
USD 1.16016
UYU 46.762733
UZS 13928.899445
VES 603.588481
VND 30576.027788
VUV 137.968798
WST 3.141501
XAF 655.431833
XAG 0.015467
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.135392
XCG 2.090279
XDR 0.81461
XOF 655.434655
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.843291
ZAR 19.197117
ZMK 10442.845561
ZMW 21.833788
ZWL 373.571181
  • CMSC

    0.1300

    22.91

    +0.57%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4800

    62.75

    -0.76%

  • BCC

    -0.6150

    66.665

    -0.92%

  • RYCEF

    0.5700

    16.02

    +3.56%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    50.97

    +0.37%

  • RIO

    0.7300

    104.04

    +0.7%

  • NGG

    1.4100

    86.13

    +1.64%

  • AZN

    -0.5300

    186.93

    -0.28%

  • BCE

    -0.1250

    24.045

    -0.52%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    33.17

    -1.3%

  • CMSD

    -0.0880

    22.802

    -0.39%

  • BP

    0.4550

    45.585

    +1%

  • VOD

    -0.1950

    15.045

    -1.3%

  • BTI

    0.9450

    66.245

    +1.43%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    12.77

    +0.78%

War risks choking Iran's world-beating cinema, warn directors
War risks choking Iran's world-beating cinema, warn directors / Photo: Valery HACHE - AFP

War risks choking Iran's world-beating cinema, warn directors

Independent filmmakers in Iran face a fresh wave of repression and extreme economic hardship because of the war, risking choking off a mainstay of world cinema, industry insiders say.

Text size:

Despite heavy censorship and regular prosecutions, acclaimed directors from Asghar Farhadi, Jafar Panahi to Mohammad Rasoulof have been winning Oscars and heaps of awards at top European festivals for years with their movies about life in the Islamic republic.

Pegah Ahangarani, an actor-director who fled the country in 2022, is one of several Iranian filmmakers at the Cannes Film Festival, which has championed Iranian cinema for decades and awarded its top prize to Panahi last year.

Ahangarani worries that the small pocket of freedom which made it possible to produce independent films in Iran appears to be closing.

"In recent years, there's really been a massive underground, clandestine film movement, a lot of filmmakers have started making films without authorisation, without women in headscarves," the 42-year-old told AFP in Cannes.

"Now, with the war, the little information we get from Iran tends to show that it's the same for filmmakers as for the rest of the population, meaning repression that is stronger than ever. They are much harsher than before," she said.

Iran has carried out mass arrests and a spate of executions since the US and Israeli attack on the country on February 28 which also prompted authorities to block access to the international internet for most people.

This followed one of the most bloody periods of repression in the country's recent history following anti-government protests in January, with human rights groups saying thousands of people were killed by security forces.

Panahi, who has been jailed twice, faced a court hearing on Wednesday over his latest sentence, a one-year prison term and two-year travel ban, according to Iranian media.

- 'Threshold' -

Ahangarani's film -- "Rehearsals for A Revolution" -- is a highly personal take on the history of political repression in Iran, which premiered in Cannes to very positive reviews.

Divided into five chapters, it tells the stories of how her father's best friend, one of her school teachers, and a classmate fell foul of authorities, with their lives ending in either imprisonment, suicide or exile.

It also shows Ahangarani caught up in the deadly so-called Green Movement pro-democracy protests in 2009, as well as her despair about events in 2026.

"The war, by its nature, won't bring anything other than a break in the path the Iranian people were taking (towards freedom)," Ahangarani said. "They were struggling for, moving forward step by step, and the war did nothing but interrupt that progress."

Another documentary in Cannes, "In the Face of the Ogre" by Mahsa Karampour, focuses on the experience of exile at a time when even more people are looking to flee the country.

"We can resist, reinvent ourselves, and even say that censorship and bans can motivate us all the more," the Paris-based filmmaker told AFP. "But I think that at a certain point, when the pressure is both economic and psychological, there's a threshold where it can cause paralysis."

Iran's currency has plummeted in value over the last year, making it even more costly for those thinking of fleeing abroad.

Kaveh Farnam, a Dubai-based director and former head of the Iranian Independent Filmmakers Association, said inflation and internet censorship are having a devastating effect on all the technical staff who work in the Iranian cinema industry.

"I know many industry people who haven't been able to work for months," he told AFP. "They are badly under pressure, out of money, with no income and the prices are increasing every day."

The war has given "an excuse for the regime to be more savage and brutal," he said.

"One of the consequences of the Israeli and American attack is that they put more pressure on intellectuals. Now they have an excuse to say, 'You are a spy, you are working for Israel,'" he said.

Z.W.Varughese--DT