TV is trying to make the world a single image'
5 Jan 2009, 0013 hrs IST
Samira Makhmalbaf, daughter of the acclaimed Iranian director Mohsen Makhmalbaf, became a film-maker at the age of 18 with ‘The Apple' in 1998.
Since then, she has directed films like ‘Blackboard', ‘Five in the Afternoon', ‘Two-Legged Horse', and a segment in the ensemble film on September 11. Samira, a member of the jury at the recently-concluded international film festival in Thiruvananthapuram, spoke to H Shaji:
What is your philosophy of film-making?
The idea of being someone who I could never be drew me into film-making. Experiencing life in different contexts provides one with a deeper understanding of life. It saves one from a narrow world view. Cinema is one thing that can change thoughts. We can reduce human pain somehow through cinema. The magic of cinema is something else.
You seem to be fascinated by
‘Five in the Afternoon' was made in
How do you see terrorism?
The term terrorist is a cliche. I call it violence. There is no difference between various forms of violence. Whether it is in the name of religion, political party, or for love, violence is the same. When we have different names for violence we are legitimising its existence. I associate groups like Taliban with ignorance, violence, and closing doors to others.
What is your take on Iranian society?
‘The Apple' deals with Iranian society and Islamic religion. I am criticising these in some ways. I don't make films about people i can't love. In
How do you deal with multiple identities of being a woman, a Muslim, and an Iranian?
Somehow, i am all these. I consider myself more a human being than a woman. I owe it to my dad. Being religious is something personal. It need not be in the realm of politics or power. I criticise Islam because i was born in it; i could observe it closer.
How do you see the medium of television?
In the rush towards modernity, the world often misses the values of civilisation. Television is teaching us to think in a very cliched manner. TV is trying to make the world a single image/voice. It is trying to make all humanity one person, thus loosing the character of being human.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/TV_is_trying_to_make_the_world_a_single_image/articleshow/3934614.cms
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Samira Makhmalbaf
When Samira Makhmalbaf made The Apple (1998) at age 17, about
It wasn't, and neither is Blackboards, talented Samira Makhmalbaf's second picture, a narrative feature, which premiered at
The start:
"I was traveling around
The Kurdish-speaking characters in Makhmalbaf's movie-impoverished teachers and youthful smugglers- shuttle back and forth between
"I didn't want to be too specific about any country or region," Makhmalbaf agreed."It's a rather surrealistic film, with the bombings as a bad dream, a nightmare, I imagined in my head. So it is hard to tell who is responsible,
"The issues of smuggling, of people without homes, I could have made in other Iranian provinces. However, I couldn't make a film about
Many of those in the cast are citizenry from Halabceh; one actor is professional, Behnaz Jafari, the sole female in Blackboards. Mahkmalbaf: "I liked the contrast between one woman and a whole group of men. Since women are so ignored in
"Originally, an actor was cast as the primary teacher. One day he talked to me: could I fire him? The person who now plays the part [Said Mohamadi] came to me spontaneously. For the role of the father, I opted for a well-known Irani professional. As others were natural, he stood out. He was too exaggerated. I found myself with a dilemma. How to blend his acting with the others? He solved the problem himself: 'I'm going. Take someone else.' I chose instead this old man. His skin, his pain, showed all the right information.
"Using such non-actors was both difficult and easy. It was easy in that the people were not as complicated as urban actors. They knew nothing about the sixth art. Many had seen no films at all. Less than a year ago, they still had no electricity.
"It was difficult because they would stop working for prayers, for local feasts. I told them they couldn't, they wouldn't listen to me. In order to encourage them, I had to set an example. I had to go into icy waters, and I climbed mountains, but not out of machismo. They would do it if I, a woman, did it first."
A postscript: The New York Times on December 5, 2002, announced that Makhmalbaf, now 22, is directing "the first feature film to be made in
GERALD PEARY (January, 2003)
URL: http://www.newageislam.com/interview/why-i-criticise-islam?-/d/1098