وبلاگ
• "منها" در جشنواره ی فیلم های ایرانی سانفرانسیسکو
27/5/1389فیلم کوتاه "منها" به بخش مسابقه ی سومین جشنواره ی فیلم های ایرانی سانفرانسیسکو راه یافت. این جشنواره مخصوص رقابت فیلم های بلند و کوتاه فیلمسازان ایرانی در هر نقطه ای از جهان است و در روزهای 18 و 19 سپتامبر در سانفرانسیسکوی امریکا برگزار می شود.
« منها » یک فیلم داستانی و درعین حال تجربی ست که فاقد جغرافیا ، زبان و زمانی مشخص است ... ماجرای فیلم در یک شرکت تیغ سازی می گذرد ... در این شرکت یک مستخدم جوان و ساده مشغول به کار است که دارای توانایی هایی ویژه است ... تله پاتی می داند و فکر تمام افراد و حتی اشیاء را می خواند ... اکثر مواقع پیش بینی های او بر قدرت روشن بینی اش می افزاید .
هم اکنون این فیلم در بخش مسابقه ی فیلم کوتاه چهاردهمین جشن خانه ی سینما حضور دارد و با 40 اثر دیگر رقابت می کند.
بعضی از عوامل این فیلم عبارتند از :
مشاوران فیلمنامه : وحید واحد – جلال تهرانی،بازیگران : کامران محسنی – محمد اکبری – هدی سیاه تیری – حسن اسلامی مقدم – امیر منجی – مجتبی علیزاده، طراح صحنه و لباس : محمد اکبری، گروه صحنه : محسن کیان – مسلم مسکنی – مجتبی علیزاده – مهدی عباسی – ناصر رضایی – فائزه عمادی، تصویربردار و تدوین گر : کاظم ملایی، صدابردار : ابوالفضل طبسی، صداگذار : کاظم ملایی - مجتبا اسماعیل زاده، موسیقی : بابک میرزاخانی، دستیاران کارگردان: علی محمدی – ایمان عطایی، گروه تصویر : خلیل خسروانی – ایمان عطایی – علی اسلامی مقدم، عکاس : علی محمدی، عنوان بندی و جلوه های تصویری : امیر مهران، طراح لوگو و پوستر : ایما جمالی، تصویربردار پشت صحنه : مصطفی تیموریان، مدیر تولید : علی علوی، دستیار تهیه : حسن شمس آبادی، مجری طرح : شرکت نقش دای،تهیه کننده و نویسنده و کارگردان : کاظم ملایی
سایر فیلم های این جشنواره به شرح زیر می باشند:
Films of the 3rd Annual Iranian Film Festival- San Francisco: September 18-19, 2010
::
~ All films have English subtitles, if they are not in English ~
Iranian Film Festival – San Francisco© is an annual event showcasing the independent feature and short films made by or about the Iranians from around the world.
 ::
***
A Tribute to Fakhri Khorvash [In Person]
 
Fakhri Korvash, Iranian stage and screen actress, started her film 
career in 1955 with a film called “For You,” directed by Jamshid 
Sheibani. She has been one of the sought after actresses on stage and 
screen in the history of Iranian cinema and theater. She has played in 
some of the most memorable and best films since the 1950s.
 
Mrs. Khorvash will be present at the screening of “Prince Ehtejab” for 
her tribute and the Q & A, and during the festival to meet her fans.
 
Filmography:
Yek boos-e koochooloo (2005), Bogzar zendegi konam (1986), Taraj (1985),
 Malakh-zadegan (1984),  The Scarecrow (1984), Dada (1982), Parvaz dar 
ghafas (1980), Zemzeme-ye mohabbat (1980),  Ghobar Neshinha (1978), 
Sooteh-Delan (1978), Shatranje bad (1976), Vaghti ke aseman beshkafad 
(1976), Shazdeh Ehtejab (1974), Nefrin (1973), Hasan siah (1972), Aghaye
 Hallou (1970), Tolu (1970), The Nobody (1960), We Are All Sinners 
(1959), South of the City [Jonube shahr] (1958), The Generous Pauper 
[Late javanmard] (1958), Bohloul (1958)

 Prince Ehtejab (Shazdeh Ehtejab)
Director: Bahman Farmanara, Story: Houshang 
Golshiri, Iran, 1974, 93 minutes, Cast: Jamshid Mashayekhi, Fakhri 
Khorvash, Nouri Kasraee, Vali Shirandami, Hossein Kasbian, Parvin 
Soleimani, F.Behjat Mohamadi 
 
Based on a famous novel by the late Houshang Golshiri the film is about 
the last of a Ghajar Dynasty, but in reality was a very strong 
indictment of monarchy. When the film won the Best Film prize at the 
Third International Film Festival of Tehran the passage of getting a 
release permit was made easier, although still the scissors of 
censorship took about five minutes out of the film.
Set during the final years of the Qajar dynasty (1795-1925), Prince 
Ehtejab offers a searing look at the end of a world and lifestyle. Dying
 of tuberculosis, Ehtejab spends his days locked up in his palace, 
wandering its corridors and aurveying his possessions, Haunted by 
memories of his family’s and his own brutality, he’s even visited by the
 ghosts of his father and grandfather, who taunt him with charges that 
he has betrayed his heritage. Houshang Golshiri’s acclaimed novel was 
powerfully adapted by Farmanara and the novelist himself, brilliantly 
capturing the shifts between physical reality and the private world the 
Prince increasingly inhabits. The film won the Grand Prize at the Tehran
 Film Festival, and was one of the first Iranian films to be widely 
screened internationally.
Bahman Farmanara

Bahman Farmanara's first film, Prince Ehtejab, is somewhat reminiscent 
of Satyajit Ray's The Music Room as it observes the declining days of a 
wealthy man, living in a painful solitude in his mansion. Knowing that 
he must soon die, the Prince recalls the extravagant regimes of both his
 father and grandfather, who were directly related to the Qajars, the 
former royal family of Iran.  Farmanara shows how each generation has 
taken cruelty a step forward, from the crude anger of the grandfather to
 the ruthless psychological torture inflicted on his wife by the Prince 
himself. The dialogue is full of pretty ironies, the compositions are 
arresting, and the atmosphere of the old house is perfectly conveyed. 
Farmanara won the Grand Prix at the Tehran International Film 
Festival in 1974 for Prince Ehtejab and the film's closing shot, of the 
doomed man slowly descending a spiral staircase into the dark bowels of 
his mansion, is hard to forget.
Space Tourists
Director: Christian Frei, Switzerland, 2009, 98 minutes, Cast: Anousheh Ansari, Jonas Bendiksen, Dumitru Popescu

 
In his most recent work, Christian Frei turns to an age-old dream of 
man: to leave our planet as a «normal person» and travel into outer 
space. For 20 million dollars, the Iranian-American Anousheh Ansari was 
able to fulfil her childhood dream and becomes the first female space 
tourist. This documentary follows her journey from rigorous training in 
Star City, Kazakhstan, into space and shows everyday life as it is on 
the International Space Station.
 

“Swiss director Christian Frei obtains extraordinary access to people 
and places behind the scenes of the space tourism industry. Filming 
locations include Kazakhstan, Romania, Russia, France, and the 
International Space Station. He includes footage of space tourists 
taste-testing food, undergoing survival training, and struggling to get 
into their space suits.
Festivals: Sundance 2010, HotDocs,  Sydney Film Festival, Zurich Film Festival, London International Documentary Festival...
Christian Frei

Christian Frei was born in 1959 in Schönenwerd, Switzerland. He studied 
visual media in the Department of Journalism and Communication at the 
University of Fribourg. He made his first documentary in 1981. Since 
1984 he has been working as an independent filmmaker and producer. In 
1997 he produced his first feature length documentary, RICARDO, MIRIAM Y
 FIDEL, the portrait of a Cuban family torn between loyalty to 
revolutionary ideals and the desire to emigrate to the United States. 
In 2001, this is followed by, the portrait of James Nachtwey, whom Frei 
accompanied to various places of war. This film is nominated for an 
Oscar in the category of «Documentary Feature» and receives twelve 
international awards. 
A Very Close Encounter
Director: Esmaeel Mihandoust, Iran, 2009, 100 
minutes, Cast: Ladan Mostofi, Anahita Nemati, Hamidreza Pegah, Soroosh 
Sehat, Shahrokh Forootanyan

 
A car accident creates a suspicious for the investigator to find out the
 cause and the events that led to the accident...while discovering deep 
emotional and personal relationships among the characters. It is about a
 friendship that goes sour as the story widens through the detective 
findings.
Esmaeel Mihandoust

Born 1955 in Khoi, Iran; graduated from the Tehran Commerce University 
(1977) and Experimental Film Foundation (1991). Directed some short 
films [Me, Rear Window and Hitch; Phobia, 13th Hour], and many TV 
serials [The Adventures of House Number 13, The Moon and the Fire, The 
Old House, The Neighborhood Attorney, Intimate Enemies, Yek Tir Do 
Neshan] before directing his first feature film: A Very Close Encounter.
 He has written many articles on cinema for various publications and has
 thought at colleges in Tehran and Isfahan. He has also written two 
books titled: New World New Cinema, and Truth in Documentary.
Esmaeel Mihandoust [director] and Anahita Nemati [actress] will be present at the screening of their film for the Q&A.
Salam Rugby
Director: Faramarz Beheshti, Iran/New Zealand, 2010, 61 minutes

Women's rugby in patriarchal Iran may sound like an anomaly, but as this
 documentary by Iranian-New Zealander Faramarz Beheshti shows, Iranian 
women are more than ready to dive into the nearest rock or maul if only 
the authorities would allow it. Following the Islamic Revolution in 1979
 competitive sports for women were actively discouraged and it wasn't 
until the social reforms of the 90s that women started to appear on the 
sporting field again. Women's rugby was introduced in 2004, but shortly 
afterwards a change in government meant strict guidelines were 
reinforced. 
Beheshti's film follows several teams throughout Iran as they negotiate a
 Kafkaesque minefield of restrictions and regulations. Practicing 
indoors completely covered head-to-toe and always under the watchful eye
 of the ever present 'security' forces, these women keep training in the
 forlorn hope of one day playing an actual match. This film candidly 
illustrates the realities of life and sport in Iran in a way that will 
no doubt be revelatory to rugby-mad Kiwis.
Faramarz Beheshti

Beheshti was born 51 years ago in Iran and immigrated to Italy when he 
was four so had little experience of his birthplace before he made Salam
 Rugby. Beheshti is married to a Kiwi and has lived in New Zealand with 
their children since 2005, where he gained a passion for the game of 
Rugby.
Letters to the President
Director:  Petr Lom, Germany/Czech Republic/Canada/France, 2009, 72 minutes

 
This is an observational verité film about President Ahmadinejad’s 
regime in Iran. Allowed to travel on several of the President’s populist
 trips to the countryside. During his trips, the President receives many
 letters – the government claims ten million – from poor Iranians asking
 for help. The film takes these letters to the President as its 
narrative thread, and as a device to provide a glimpse into an Iran that
 is usually not open to outsiders.
Petr Lom

Petr Lom born in 1968, in Prague, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic] is
 an independent documentary director and producer. Entirely self-taught,
 he directs, shoots and edits his own films. He is a former academic 
with a Ph.D. in political philosophy from Harvard University. To anyone 
contemplating a career change, he says: do it as soon as possible.
 
Chasing Che
Director: Alireza Rofougaran, Iran, 2009, 78 minutes
 

Chasing Che is the account of a four-year odyssey in 
which an Iranian businessman switches the course of his life. Inspired 
by a biography of Che Guevara, which he reads and then translates into 
Farsi, he embarks on a long odyssey through Latin America and Europe, 
home movie camera in hand. His mission: to retrace Che's footsteps. In 
an effort to gain a greater personal understanding of Che, he looks up 
any of the late revolutionary's surviving friends and foes he can find. 
In the process, he gains new insights 
into his own life. Viewing the myth of Che Guevara with an eye to his 
own society, he realizes the peculiarity of such a cross-cultural 
inspiration. Upon his return to Iran, he witnesses how the same cross 
cultural enthusiasm among his countrymen gives rise to an open 
controversy. Throughout the film, there is a process of change as he 
finds himself confronted by the professional challenges posed by his new
 endeavor and his own obsessive commitment to fulfilling the project.
Alireza Rofougaran

Alireza Rofougaran was born in Tehran, Iran; June 1965. He was a 
businessman until 2004, when he changed careers to make his first film: 
Chasing Che, inspired by reading and translating Jon Lee Anderson’s 
biography: Che Guevara; A Revolutionary life. He has also taken acting 
parts in several films, including an interactive video of Anna Gutto’s 
New York play: “IN SECURITY” April 2009. Alireza Rofougaran currently 
lives in Tehran, translating books and making documentary films.
The Final Word (Kalame Akhar)
Director: Moslem Mansouri, Iran, 2009, 55 minutes

Ahmad Shamlou, the most prominent and influential contemporary Iranian 
poet, worked extensively in the area of folklore culture and language 
which have tremendously affected the current folklore language and 
literature in Iran. 
Shamlou in his poetry spoke consciously 
of human’s suffering, injustice, love and romance. Through his 
distinctive possession of language and words, he skillfully sided with 
the oppressed and opposed cruel regimes and their inhumane institutions.
 Shamlou in his poems echoed the hardships and visions of his people and
 in doing so; his pen was his best means.
Moslem Mansouri

Moslem Mansouri was born in 1964 in Iran. In 1981, because of his 
political views, was arrested and imprisoned for two years. He began 
working in Iranian cinema magazines in 1991 and published a book, 
“Cinema and literature”. In the same year he studied film in the Faculty
 of Art, Azad University, for one year. From 1994 to 1998, Mansouri, 
under the pretext of media work, secretly produced eight documentary 
films about the lives of the people in the theocratic rule of Iran. 
“The Final Word” is Mansouri’s second and newest film on Ahmad Shamlou. The first was: Shamlou, the poet of freedom.
Diplomacy
Director: Jon Goldman, US, 2009, 9 minutes, Cast: Michelle Forbes, Navid Neghaban, Omid Abtahi, Nazanin Boniadi
 
The U.S. Secretary of State (Michelle Forbes, True Blood) is meeting 
the Iranian Foreign Minister for the first high-level diplomatic talks 
between the two countries in 30 years. Each has an interpreter: on the 
American side, a young man of Iranian descent; on the Iranian side, an 
equally bilingual young woman. But as the diplomats dig in their heels, 
it soon falls to the interpreters to keep negotiations on track, making 
outright policy revisions far beyond their authority. Will their unique 
approach bring about mutual understanding – or nuclear disaster?
Based on a topical subject, the film brings up the latent lack of 
understanding between Iran and the United States and calls a general 
question on a possible dialogue between the two countries. Through a 
lucid sense of irony, the film suggests that, sometimes, moving a few 
words could change things, as diplomatic relations often hang by the 
subtle thread of rhetoric.
- Winner of the Audience Award at the Paris Film Festival.
Jon Goldman

Jon Goldman is a screenwriter, director, and translator who lives in Los
 Angeles. His first short film, Kind of a Blur, played over 25 film 
festivals worldwide. Jon has been an Academy of Motion Picture Arts 
& Sciences Nicholl Fellowship Finalist and Netflix Find Your Voice 
Film Competition Finalist. Diplomacy is his second short film. His first
 short film, Kind of a Blur, starred Sandra Oh enjoyed similar acclaim. 
Warring Factions
Director: Justin Mashouf, US/Iran, 2009, 78 minutes

An American-born Iranian breakdancer finds cultural awakening by 
exploring his multi-ethnic roots. Faced with dual nationality in two 
conflicting countries, he travels to Iran to examine the political 
issues first-hand while exploring his cultural identity with a group of 
Iranian b-boys. By combining documentary and studio reenactments, 
Warring Factions looks at the blurring of world borders, and the looming
 threat of another war in the Middle East.
 Justin Mashouf

Justin Mashouf is based in Los Angeles where he works in television news
 and independent film.  Justin is a graduate of University of Arizona, 
where he graduated with a bachelor of fine arts in Media Arts in 2008.  
Justin works extensively on the topics of identity and Muslims in 
America. In early 2007 he produced and co-directed the 20 minute short 
narrative "The Runners" about a married couple involved in a Mexican 
human trafficking operation. Mashouf began working on Warring Factions 
in April of 2007 as his first feature length film project, sponsored by 
the University of Arizona.  He traveled to Iran for 5 weeks in order to 
shoot half of the film while the other half was filmed in Arizona.  
Warring Factions has screened at several international film festivals.  
Mashouf is currently working on a documentary about Muslims in the US 
prison system, filming, and writing letters to Muslim Americans in 
prisons in multiple US states.
Door
Director: Adel Yaraghi, Iran 2009, 3 minutes 
 

A look at the confrontational treatment of the issue of Hijab in the past 50 years…    
Adel Yaraghi, born in 1968, studied filmmaking at 
Loyola Marymount and holds BFA, BA. He has been making films in the U.S.
 and Iran since 1998.
Rapping In Tehran
                                                
    Director: Hassan Khademi, Iran, 2009, 37 minutes
 
How many Iranian rappers can you remove in one single day, if you are 
convinced that hip hop should be forbidden? Close to a hundred, if you 
are as efficient as the Iranian police?–?but in a country where youth is
 irreversibly taking over the country, the result is simply that 
hundreds of new rappers are seeking out the illegal studios in Tehran to
 try their hand at the difficult and controversial art of Persian rap. 
‘Rapping in Tehran’ follows the dangerous cat-and-mouse play and gives 
us a unique, kaleidoscopic look at the underground culture that is 
Iranian hip hop?–?underground despite the fact that several million 
young Iranians are listening to the music today. The authorities are 
upholding their ban and rappers are continuing to organize illegal 
concerts, from which the film gets its unforgettable, life-affirming 
images of young girls in headscarves and heavy makeup dancing away to 
the heavy beats of the music. ‘Rapping in Tehran’ is a unique 
contemporary document?–?and news from the front of a musical youth 
rebellion.
 

Hassan Khademi graduated with MA of Arts from 
University of Tehran and has conducted several research projects about 
Iranian underground music.
Bakhtiari Alphabet
Directors: Cima Sedigh [In Person] & Reza Ghadyani, Iran/US, 2009, 56 minutes

 Set in the breathtaking Zagros Mountains of southwest Iran. Bakhtiari 
Alphabet documents the seasonal migration of the proud, ancient 
Bakhtiari tribe as they face challenges and celebrate daily triumphs, in
 their struggle to maintain their richly textured culture in the face of
 the 21st century encroachments on its practices and traditions.
This film follows a nomadic community in Iran, providing cultural 
insight and engaging issues related to the challenges of educating 
children. It reveals both the struggle and humanity of this rapidly 
disappearing culture.
                                                                                                     
Cima Sedigh

A professor of education at Sacred Heart University since 1999, Cima 
Sedigh’s work has been inspired by the resolutions of the United Nations
 on Peace Education and Equity Education.  Her work aims to promote a 
global vision through understanding and appreciating diversity.  She has
 followed this path in numerous research projects, art exhibits, 
symposia, cultural events and in her film making.  Her first documentary
 “Bakhtiari Alphabet” was made during extensive trips to the rugged and 
remote region of Iran where the Bakhtiari live and migrate.  This film, 
which took more than 7 years to make, brings to life her on-site 
research on tribal life and education among this proud and beautiful 
people.  In the process, she learned to wear many hats, that of 
producer, director, editor, logistics chief etc. due to her meager 
budget.  But the challenge turned out to be rewarding and 
transformational for her life.
Reza Ghadyani

Reza Ghadyani, born in Iran in 1974, came to film through his love of 
theater and movies.  He started acting at age 12 and had his first 
professional role (in Shakespeare’s Hamlet) at 16.  From a young age, he
 has been involved in the production of numerous documentaries, short 
films and TV series in Iran in various capacities.  His forte is 
cinematography, still photography as well as editing.  A member of the 
International Center for Dialogue among Civilizations, Reza has taken 
part in making 1,000 minutes for a documentary series for the Center.  
His collaboration with Cima Sedigh, in Tehran studio and on location, 
was his first feature length directorial experience.  Reza also employed
 his considerable cinematography talent, experience and perseverance to 
give “Bakhtiari Alphabet” the look and feel of a professional 
full-budget production, filming in extreme cold, at high altitude and in
 inclement weather.  Despite all the obstacles, he has succeeded to give
 with this film a taste of contemporary Iranian cinema to international 
audiences.
Naghsh e Jahan
Director: Pouria Rafiee, Iran, 2009, 14 minutes
 

An emotional trip into people’s lives at the historic Nagh e Jahan landmark in Isfahan.
7 Women
Director: Sara Rastegar, Iran/France, 2009, 52 minutes

 
Thirty years after the revolution that led to the departure of many 
Iranians, including that of my family to France, I returned to Iran for a
 trip across the country, where, in the course of my meetings with the 
women who stayed there, I wanted to understand the complexity of the 
arrangements of the people with the daily reality of its country. The 
time of a movie, a weaving Persian colored carpet consisting of words, 
facts and gestures of women from different backgrounds, the emerging 
patterns of a traditional lifestyle that is constantly adapting to the 
realities of its society.
Sara Rastegar

Born in Isphahan in 1983, Sara Rastegar left Iran at age 5 with her 
family. She returned 12 years later to work on several photography 
projects. After performing in dance and theater, she went on to study 
architecture in Nantes and Paris.
She made her first film, “L’ami”, in 2005 which was shown at different festivals around the world. 
  
Reza Shooting Back
Directors: Connie Rinehart & Tom Donohue, France 2009, 50 minutes
 

As one of the world's elite photojournalists, Reza has used his camera 
and risked his life to expose the stark realities of innocent people 
caught in the conflicts of war. Imprisoned and tortured - and eventually
 - exiled - from his native Iran, Reza's experiences have only 
strengthened his resolve to promote freedom of speech and justice. 
 
“Reza Shooting Back” offers a riveting glimpse into the life of this 
courageous humanitarian as Reza recounts his powerful stories from the 
streets of Iran and the mountains of Afghanistan to the villages of 
Rwanda and his beloved family in Paris.
Connie Rinehart & Tom Donohue

Connie Rinehart and Tom Donohue, are two Washington DC based filmmakers.
 They are filmmakers in the traditional sense of the word - handling all
 creative aspects of the production: producing, shooting, editing, and 
writing.  Working as a two-person crew they achieve incredible intimacy 
with their subjects during production and in the edit room they have the
 advantage of working with their own material. Connie and Tom were 
nominated for an EMMY award in the category of "Outstanding Cultural 
& Artistic Programing" for Reza Shooting Back.
Reza Deghati

World famous for his intrepid explorer's style of capturing the world's 
most exotic places, Reza has covered most of the globe for National 
Geographic Magazine. Numerous films about Reza's work have been produced
 by National Geographic Television, most notably Frontline Diaries, 
which won an Emmy Award in 2002. Reza later served as Creative Director 
for National Geographic's most viewed documentary, Inside Mecca, in 
2005. As part of its Exceptional Journeys series, National Geographic 
released "Reza Shooting Back" looking at Reza's career as a 
photojournalist, with special features highlighting his extensive 
humanitarian work.
Reza's images are iconic, but there's more to the award-winning photojournalist than just his camera.
Reza's photographs have been exhibited in major cities throughout the 
world. War+Peace (2009), an exhibit featuring thirty years worth of 
Reza's photojournalistic adventures, was held at the Caen Memorial 
(Peace Museum) in Normandy, France. One World, One Tribe, was the 
National Geographic Museum's first outdoor exhibition in Washington 
D.C., and Crossing Destinies, Reza's landmark exhibition in Paris, drew a
 million visitors. 
The Man with Red Travel Suit
Director: Maryam Orang, Iran, 2009, 9 minutes, Cast: Mehrnoush Rahpeima, Khatere Isvand, Akram Deldadeh, Majid Irani
 

A
 girl among all those who are waiting for a man with red travel suit 
makes her mind to go after him. The contradiction of keeping waiting and
 moving ahead.
Maryam Orang

Maryam Orang was born in Tehran, 
Iran. She holds a BA in Law and now is an attorney. She's also graduated
 from Iranian Young Cinema Society filmmaking courses she attended in 
2000. So far she has made 5 short films.
Takhti
Director: Mohammad Hassan Shahmohammadi, 2008, Iran, 24 minutes, Narrator: Manochehr Esmaeili
 

A look at Takhti's life, the most popular athlete of Iran's history; a 
review and analysis of the popularity and the mystery of the eternity of
 this mythical figure.
Gholamreza Takhti (1930-1968) was the greatest and most
 popular wrestler in Iranian history. He won the gold medal at the 1956 
Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia, Silver medals at the 1952 Olympic
 Games in Helsinki and the 1960 Games in Rome. He died at the young age 
of 37. His death still remains a mystery despite the report that he 
committed suicide. He is survived by his wife and son, Babak Takhti, an 
author and translator.
Mohammad Hassan Shahmohammadi

He was born in 1975 in Tehran; graduated in communication and has 
studied filmmaking by taking courses in film through workshops and 
experiments. He is an independent filmmaker and has been a writer and 
director of several fictions, experimental and short films that accepted
 in some national and international film festivals.
Carpet to Celestial Heavens
Director:  Hamieh Razavi, Iran, 2008, 3 minutes, Camera & Editing: Bahman Kiarostami
 

Persian carpets, suitable for any occasion.
Hamieh Razavi

Hamieh Razavi began film making by attending Abbas Kiarostami’s 
workshops and has made several short films since. She recently made 
“Taste of Shirin” which is a short documentary about the making of 
Kiarostami’s film Shirin.
Filmography:
Carpet to Celestial Heavens 2008                                                                                           
Taste of Shirin 
2008                                                                                                             
 
Capricious woman 
2009                                                                                                                                
 
The wind blows you away 
2009                                                                                                                 
 
Flare 2010Camera Lucida 2010
Above the Gray Clouds
Director: Sare Shafipour, Iran, 2010, 8 minutes, Animation
 

One night a woman decides to follow a strange voice in her room. Her 
curiosity leads to finding a different world of a man who lives in the 
lower floor. 
Sare Shafipour

She was born in 1981 Kerman/ Iran. She produced her first animation in 
Saba studio in Tehran, when she was 17. Then she started to study 
graphic in university of Tehran. She produced her second animation ( 
SAMA DANCE) as her final project and then graduated from Tehran 
university in 2004. She continued her studies and got her masters of 
arts in animation from university of Tarbiat Modares (T.M.U). She 
produced her last animation (ABOVE THE GRAY CLOUDS) in 2010 as her final
 project in T.M.U. Filmography: Sama Dance (2004); Above The Gray Clouds (2010)
 
The Wind Plays as it Wishes
Director: Pouya Parsamagham, Iran, 2009, 4 minutes

An elderly couple takes an afternoon nap on a summer’s day…
Pouya Parsamagham studied graphics and attended several workshops of Abbass Kiarostami and has been making short films since.
How Green Was Our Valley
Director:  Fereshteh Joghataei, Iran, 2009, 32 minutes
 

A dam has been built and the water is rising and 63 villages will be 
flooded and their residents must leave. There is a holy shrine in one of
 the villages and people of the villages and people are waiting for a 
miracle.
Fereshteh Joghataei

Fereshteh Joghataei - born in Tehran, 1977. Graduate of Puppetry from 
Tehran Sooreh University. Working as performance and designer of special
 effects, continuity, make-up artist, set and costume designer of the 
different films. 
Filmography:
2009 How Green was our Valley (Director)
2002 Tokyo, Non Stop (Saeid Alam Zadeh) - Special Effects
2003 The Riverside (Ali Reza Amini) - As backstage projection director 
2004 Empty Hands (Abdolreza Kahani) - As backstage projection director for film
2006 A Few Kilos of Dates for a Funeral (Saman Salour) - Set & Costume Design 
2006 Crossing the Dust (Shawkat Amin korki) - Make-up - Continuity
Minus
Director: Kazem Mollaie, Iran, 2009, 23 minutes, 
Cast: Kamran Mohseni,  Mohammad Akbari, Hoda Siahtiri, Hasan Eslami 
Moghaddam, Amir Monji, Mojtaba Alizadeh, Mohsen Kian, Moslem Maskani, 
Mehdi Abbasi, Ali Eslami Moghaddam, Hasan Shams Abadi, Farzad Ahmad 
Poor, Mehdi Sanaie, Hamid Zareyian, Hosein Fadaie 
 

Minus is a fiction and at the same time an experimental movie, which 
doesn't enjoy any distinct geography, language and time ... The events 
occur in a razor producing company, in which a young and simple retainer
 is working, who has special capabilities ... He knows telepathy and he 
can read the minds of all people and even things ... Most of the time, 
his predictions increase his ability of presentiment …
Kazem Mollaie

Kazem Mollaie was born in 1981, in Sabzevar, Iran. He is a member of the
 “Iranian Young Cinema Society " - 1998; started film making with a 
short film called " From game to ... " 1999; he is a member of "Iranian 
Short Film Association " - Khane Cinema – 2009
Filmography:
- From game to… / 2000 / short film / 14 min
- Tel / 2000 / short film / 20 min
- The wind is blowing in the Alley / 2002 / Fiction / 40 min
- Akbar,For God Sake, don't die before me! / 2003 / experimental / 38 min
- Carmen Funebre / 2005 / Short-documentary / 21 min
- Please stay away from the red line / 2008 / Short Film / 30 min
- Minus / 2009 / Short Film / 23 min
The Man Whom I Don't Know
Director: Ayda Tatari, Iran, 2009, 10 minutes, Cast: Noshin Noshiravani, Amir Mirzadeh 
 

When a woman sees her man with another woman, she undesirably falls to a
 dark endless labyrinth, in which she would be alone and… unfaithful.
Ayda Tatari

Born in 1980, Mashhad, Iran. Against her families' wishes when she was 
12 years old she started to write poems and short stories with a passion
 for the cinema. After a lot of quarrels at home she finally started 
studying Film Directing at Soureh University. After receiving her B.A., 
she started her M.A. studies on Dramatic Literature at college of fine 
arts at Tehran University. During her studies she won three writing 
prizes from Short Stories Festival and wrote some screen plays which 
were made by other directors, "Roof" and "Woman" and continued making 
her own films, documentary and fiction short subjects. Presently, she is
 working on her M.A theses, which is about connection between myth and 
Iranian new dramatic literature and screen plays. She wants to start 
directing her new screen play which is about women and their loneliness 
in this world, like her other works.
Roof Top (Poshte Bam)
Director: Hooman Mansouri, Iran, 2008, 14 minutes, Cast: Maryam Meschian, Saeed Changizian
 

Maryam, doesn't trust her husband, so she manages to spy on him from the
 roof of the adjacent building, but her plan gets to nowhere...
Hooman Mansouri

Born in 1982, in Tehran, Iran. At the age of 15, he attended the 
practical high school of Iranian National TV, which provided him with 
amateur experience in film production. Started university in 2001 at 
Sooreh University and graduated in film directing in 2006. Since 2001, 
he has been working on several projects in the Iranian film industry as a
 production manager over 15 short films. Film Editor of over 30 short 
films, TV programs and video arts. Cinematographer for 8 documentaries 
and TV programs. Director of 6 short films, including "Roof Top"- and 
documentaries and music concerts. He's also an experienced photographer 
since 1998.
Tongue of the Hidden
Director: David Anderson, UK, 2008, 6 minutes
 

'Tongue of the Hidden' is a film based on a hand printed Artist's book 
by Jila Peacock that contains ten love poems from the collected works, 
or Divan of Hafez, the fourteenth-century Persian metaphysical poet from
 Shiraz, whose work is accepted as expressing some of the central ideas 
of Sufism, the spiritual aspect of Islam. 
The whole Persian text of each poem has 
been designed in the shape of an animal mentioned by Hafez in the text, 
and set alongside a modern English translation by the artist herself. A 
conventional transcription in Persian script, appears at the end of the 
book.
Jila Peacock was born in 
Iran, studied medicine and fine art in London, then moved to Glasgow in 
1990. Her paintings have been widely exhibited in shows across the UK. 
In her latest book, Ten Poems from Hafez, her calligraphic images of 
animals are entirely formed from the original Farsi script of the poems.
 The work was exhibited in the 2006 British Museum exhibition entitled 
Word into Art.
David Anderson

As a director, his work has encompassed theatre, dance, animation, live 
action, television and film. He trained at Bath Academy of Art and the 
National Film and Television School in England. His first film, 
‘Dreamland Express’ won a British Academy Award. The next film, 
‘Dreamless Sleep’ won the Hiroshima Peace prize. His other films have 
won numerous other awards including The McLaren Award at the Edinburgh 
Festival, first prize at Melbourne Film Festival, The Silver Mikeldi at 
Bilbao, San Francisco Golden Gate Award, Chicago Golden Plaque as well 
as the Grand Prix at Charleston. He collaborated with the writer Russell
 Hoban and produced two films, ‘Deadsy’ and ‘Door’, British Animation 
Awards DVD - ‘Classic British Animation’ and are also in collections at 
the metropolitan Museum New York , Hiroshima , Oberhausen and the 
British Film Institute.
Iran: A Nation of Bloggers
Directors: Aaron Chiesa, Toru Kageyama, Hendy Sukarya, Lisa Temes, Canada, 2009, 3 minutes

An exploration of how the digital world allows many Iranians access to 
ideas and freedom of expression they haven't had for close to thirty 
years. Blogging is, in essence, a means of revolution.
 
Toru Kageyama is an 
Illustrator born in Japan, he studied Oil Painting at Tama Art 
University. Since then he has worked as a graphic designer in both Japan
 and Vancouver. Aaron Chiesa
 is Swiss Italian. He started his creative journey studying 
cinematography in Milan; there he spent most of his time working in 
film, commercials and documentaries. Born and raised in Vancouver, Lisa Temes studied
 print design and worked as a freelance designer for 2 years before 
deciding it was time to branch out into other mediums. Hendy Sukarya
 born in Indonesia, he studied multimedia design at the Nanyang Academy 
of Fine Arts in Singapore before moving to Canada to attend Vancouver 
Film School’s Digital Design program.
Tehran Kitchen
                                     
Director: Pola Schirin Beck, Germany, 2009, 17 minutes
 

Between 600 kebab a day, nagging students and an over salted soup: Three
 cooks and a kitchen help in the small university canteen in Tehran 
working with wit and irony while doing their duties on the market and in
 the kitchen, philosophizing about cooking and about life in 
general....In this rather unpretentious micro cosmos you will get to 
know more about the private moments and interesting views in this small 
parallel universe.
Pola Schirin Beck

Born in Berlin in 1982, after various jobs and directing internships in 
the film industry she spent a year at the international European Film 
College in 2003. She took up studies in directing at the "Konrad Wolf" 
College of Film and Television Potsdam- Babelsberg in 2005 and also 
works as a portrait photographer.
Paradise
Director: Ahang Bashi, Sweden, 2010, 28 minutes, Documentary
 
Eighty eight years old Simin from Iran is living in a nursing home for 
the elderly in Sweden. She doesn't speak any Swedish and the nursing 
staff can't understand her. Her everyday life is bombarded with 
tragicomical misunderstandings, but despite this Simin tries to remain a
 positive outlook on life. "Paradise" is a touching documentary about an
 Iranian woman’s encounter with the Swedish elderly care and tells with 
great sensibility and humor about our need to be understood.
Ahang Bashi

Ahang Bashi was born 1984 in Shiraz, Iran. She migrated with her family 
at the age of 3 to Sweden. She studied social anthropology at the 
university for 2 years before discovered filmmaking.  "Paradise" is 
Ahang Bashi's debut and has won prizes for best new director and best 
international student production at Nordic film festivals. "Paradise" is
 also nominated for Best Nordic Youth Film at NUFF 2010. Ahang is 
currently studying for a bachelor of fine arts in documentary filmmaking
 at university college Dramatiska Institutet in Stockholm.
Border
Director: Sattar Chamani Gol, Iran, 2009, 10 minutes, Cast: Korosh Ahmadi, Anita Jaafari   
 

An Iraqi family, while taking their bride from Iran, confront the border
 patrol and he prevents them from crossing the border. They are forced 
to pass a deviated path to return to their own country.
Sattar Chamani Gol

Sattar Chamani Gol has made 8 short films, five fictions and three 
documentaries and has won numerous awards at various international film 
festivals.
Plastic Flowers Never Die
Director: Roxanne Varzi, US/Iran, 2008, 33 minutes

 
The war with Iraq was the largest mobilization of the Iranian 
population, achieved 						
						
						
						
							مطالب ديگر:
															• 4/2/1404:  پخش عیدولوژی از پلتفرم داکیونایت
															• 5/1/1404:  «عیدولوژی» در بیبیسی فارسی
															• 16/4/1401:  هجدهمین دوره جشنواره بین المللی فیلم نهال برگزار شد
															• 27/12/1400:  فراخوان ساخت مستند سینمایی عیدولوژی
															• 20/11/1400:  گورکن نامزد بهترین پوستر از چهلمین جشنواره فیلم فجر
														+ آرشيو وبلاگ
						
	


	