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Still Life

Tabiate bijan

Iran

1974

93 Min
Color
Persian
  • Currently 4.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Sohrab Shahid Saless

PROD Parviz Sayyad

SCR Sohrab Shahid Saless

DP Houshang Baharlou

CAST Zadour Bonyadi, Mohammed Kani, Hibibollah Safarian, Habib Safaryan, Zahra Yazdani

ED Ruhallah Emami

SOUND Mohammed Sadeq Alami, M. Farshian, Ahamad Khanzadi

Berlinale (Competition)

Director

Original

Sohrab Shahid Saless

Sohrab Shahid-Saless (Sohrāb Shahǐd-Sāles, Persian: سهراب شهیدثالث, 28 June 1943, Tehran – 2 June 1998, Washington DC) was an Iranian film director and screenwriter and one of the most celebrated figures in Iranian cinema in the 20th century. After 1976 he worked in the Cinema of Germany and was an important component of the film diaspora working in the German industry.

Sohrab Shahid-Saless was born in Tehran in 1943 and lived in Tehran. He studied film in Vienna and Paris. After returning to Iran, he first worked for the Ministry of Arts and Culture, where he made 22 films. In 1976, he left Iran for Germany, where he worked as a filmmaker until 1991, then moving to Chicago. He died in Washington DC in June 1998.

In his first feature, the milestone film A Simple Event (1973), he describes the everyday life of a ten-year-old boy living in a small town with an ill mother and a father struggling to make a living smuggling fish. In contrast, Still Life (1974) explores the… read more

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Displaying 4 of 9 wall posts.
Picture of John

John

10Apr13

One of about 20 films I could say is legitimately perfect.

Picture of Zeppo

Zeppo

13Feb13

Decent.

Picture of răpciune

răpciune

9Oct11

hristoase!

Ruia likes this

  • Picture of răpciune

    răpciune

    9Oct11

    i think only Dvortsevoy's "In the Dark" and Casas' Aral, with the man collecting the bread crumps with his wet finger, ever placed such an irremovable knot into my throat. .

Picture of Rohit

Rohit

23Sep11

The best part of this film is that it doesn't sentimentalize the railway guard's loss because the film maker doesn't want us to sympathize with him. It's more a reflection on the constant changes that are inevitable even in an otherwise still and mundane life.

indah likes this

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