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The Silence

Sokout

France, Tajikistan, Iran

1998

76 Min
Color
1.66:1
Persian, Tajik, Russian
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Mohsen Makhmalbaf

PROD Marin Karmitz

SCR Mohsen Makhmalbaf

DP Ebrahim Ghafori

CAST Tahmineh Normatova, Nadereh Abdelahyeva, Giobibi Ziadolahyeva, Araz M. Shirmohamadi

ED Mohsen Makhmalbaf

Venice (In Competition), Toronto

Synopsis

Because of his special gift in identifying objects by the sounds they make, a blind young boy is employed as a string instrument tuner in a small village in Tajikistan. He may be blind but that does not mean he cannot see. On his way to work, he could tell the quality of the bread the young girls along the streets are peddling by simply touching their ware. His world is made more colorful and quaint because of his sensitivity to his surroundings. The only problem is that he is easily “tempted” by street musicians’ performances and arrives late at work. —IMDb

Director

Original

Mohsen Makhmalbaf

One of the most popular and influential Iranian filmmakers of his era, Mohsen Makhmalbaf was born in Teheran on May 29, 1957. As a working-class teen, he became involved with a militant terrorist group battling against the Shah’s regime, and at the age of 17, he was sentenced to die after stabbing a policeman. Ultimately, his youth allowed him to escape the fate of a firing squad, and after serving only five years of his sentence, he was freed in the wake of the country’s 1979 Islamic revolution. After his release, Makhmalbaf helped establish an artists’ group known as the Islamic Propagation Organization, and he became a prolific writer of plays, essays, short stories, and finally screenplays.
His first filmed script was 1981’s The Explanation, and he directed his first feature, Nassouh’s Repentance, the following year. Throughout the remainder of the decade, he wrote and directed roughly one film a year, each wildly different in style and content. Among his other early works were… read more

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Mehdi Jahan

28Mar11

A very effusive portrayal of the surroundings of the lead blind protagonist,and it's people; d poetic visuals almost nudges us to think that we are seeing dis world thru d xtraordinary auditory reception of d kid thru which he perceives d world. D final few minutes accompanied by Beethoven's 5th symphony makes a finale which is a treat to d senses. At times tho the kid's permanent angelic expression did irritate me!

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Lays Laine

10Aug10

- 'Do not talk more about what happened yesterday. Do not worry about what will happen tomorrow. Do not trust the future or the past. Live the present, do not waste time'

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Lays Laine

3Aug10

Friday, 23h?!?

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