<FESTIVAL
AND AWARD>
TEHERAN FAJR FILM FESTIVAL
BEST DIRECTOR, BEST ACTOR, BEST SOUND RECORDING
& AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARDS
IN PERSIAN WITH ENGLISH AND CHINESE SUBTITLES
Genre: Drama
Director: Majid Majidi (Children of Heaven)
Cast: Parvis Parastui, Roya Taymourian, Afarin
Obeisi
RunTime: 1 hr 36 mins
Released By: The Picturehouse and Festive Films
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.cinemajidi.com/
Opening Day: 23 August 2007
Synopsis:
Threaten by a deadly disease, Yussef, a blind university professor
goes to Paris for treatment. Before he leaves, he makes a
pledge to God, asking that his life is spared. During his
trip, he experiences a life-changing event. Back home, the
confrontation of his memories and the real world unleashes
primal fears and secret desires. The course of events will
bring him to back face to face with another reality.
Movie Review:
The least political filmmaker of Iran’s new wave of
cinema, Majid Majidi is also its most humanistic and spiritually
attuned. His films emerge like fables, stories that reveal
more about the human condition and the existential graces
of being than mere character driven narratives. Unlike his
“Baran” and Oscar nominated “The Children
of Heaven”, Majidi now focuses his attention on Iran’s
bourgeoisie adults in “The Willow Tree” but retains
his exploration of the disability last observed through the
young, sightless Mohammad from 2000’s “The Color
of Paradise”.
Majidi
sees divinity in all things human and inhuman – nature,
love, anger, innocence and sensuality. Working from the understanding
that there has to be a bigger picture, a force larger than
what is perceivable, Majidi offers a tacit journey of negotiating
the tenuous line of acceptance and indignation. He annotates
his display of religiosity through Youssef (Parvis Parastui),
a middle-aged professor of literature who despite being blindness
since young, has carved out a promising career and a family
devoted to him.
The
professor feels a deep connection to God and just like the
director, views obstacles and tragedies as a series of tests
to be endured and to fortify his spiritual constitution. Just
as suddenly, it’s determined that Youssef has an operable
tumour behind his eye, setting the road for events in a clinic
in Paris that lead to Youssef regaining the use of his sight.
While
in most films, the abatement of despair comes from the healing
of illness and disability; “The Willow Tree” sees
beyond the banality of a happy ending and reacts to the capricious
impact of change and shattered cognitive inventions. It considers
the substantiality of what is imagined to be true and the
veritable, hardened realisation of reality that comes with
Youssef’s portentous gift. After convalescing in Paris,
he returns home to Iran and rediscovers and reevaluates the
beginning of the rest of his life.
The
stark, striking shots that consists of small spaces and laconic
characters are precisely calibrated to instill subtext that’s
analogous to Youssef’s poetic stance on life. Most prominent
are the glorification of the newfound sense, reinvigorating
our latent appreciation for sights and sounds. “The
Willow Tree” is most enthralling when it boils down
to a microscopic level of reassessment of a middle-aged man
who reconnects with his desires and the world, while fixated
on the paralysing panic of a life misspent and the reconciliation
of his past and future.
Movie Rating:
(Sincere and well-acted, a paean to graces big and
small)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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