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	<channel>
		<title>World Cinema Blog</title>
		<description>Insight into Link TV's Cinemondo and the World Cinema scene at film festivals and screenings.</description>
		<link>http://www.linktv.org/worldcinema/blog</link>
		<language>en-us</language>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 May 2013 19:27:53 -0700</pubDate><item>
		   <title>CINEMONDO: The Country Teacher</title>
		   <link>http://www.linktv.org/worldcinema/blog/post/589/cinemondo-the-country-teacher</link>
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		   <description>When I found out I&#38;rsquo;d be screening a film with a gay man as the protagonist, I was both apprehensive and curious. I&#38;rsquo;ve seen too many films where a leading gay character has to die or suffer some miserable fate as a necessary part of the story&#38;rsquo;s narrative (BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN, A SINGLE MAN). However, as a gay man myself, I was curious about gay life in eastern Europe, particularly in a non-urban setting. It didn&#38;rsquo;t hurt that the film was a 2010 GLAAD award nominee for best film. &#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;&#60;a href="/programs/the-country-teacher"&#62;THE COUNTRY TEACHER&#60;/a&#62;, directed by Bohdan Slama, presents a realistic portrayal of a gay man in conflict that is refreshingly free of Hollywood&#38;rsquo;s more annoying stereotypes. The movie tells the story of Petr (nicely underplayed by Pavel Liska), a closeted prep-school teacher from Prague who comes to a bucolic Czech village to instruct children in the natural sciences. In an early lesson he advises prophetically, &#38;ldquo;If we don&#38;rsquo;t understand nature, we can&#38;rsquo;t understand ourselves.&#38;rdquo;&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;Shortly after his arrival, Petr is befriended by Marie (Zuzana Bydzovska), a local cow herder who lives with her teen son Lada (Ladislav Sidivy). While tutoring Lada in math, Petr finds himself attracted to the young man and embarks on a course of action that has traumatic consequences. It made me wonder, if Petr had been an out gay man, would he have had the problems he had? Is it possible to have a healthy romantic relationship if you still have at least one foot in the closet?This provocative yet sensitive movie doesn&#38;rsquo;t flinch from showing Petr&#38;rsquo;s feelings for Lada. We also see that certain cultural touchstones for adulthood are more relaxed in this rural community. There is no adult censure when 17-year-old Lada is seen drinking hard liquor or smoking pot and there is acceptance of his sexually active relationship with a young woman. Does the film show that homosexuality is also acceptable? Well, to a certain extent, yes, but there is also a good deal of bewilderment, fear and ignorance.&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;Director Bohdan Slama (LIKE HAPPINESS, THE WILD BEES) bravely declines to portray Petr as criminally disturbed and it was great to see that Petr&#38;rsquo;s parents seemed more concerned about his loneliness than his sexual orientation. While Petr may have felt the need to be alone when he fled city life, he soon discovers that isolation is not the answer. As he stumbles awkwardly toward making bona fide human connections, he discovers they can be found in unanticipated places.&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;As for Marie&#38;rsquo;s reaction to Petr&#38;rsquo;s encounter with her son, Zuzana Bydzovska&#38;rsquo;s beautifully layered performance shows us that a cow herder can have a pretty sophisticated understanding of human nature. In fact, Marie&#38;rsquo;s intuitive abilities regarding both Petr and Lada left me wondering whether she was the real &#38;ldquo;country teacher&#38;rdquo; here.&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;For nature lovers, there are two graphic scenes showing a cow giving birth on Marie&#38;rsquo;s farm. I leave the symbolism for others to discern. But if you&#38;rsquo;re in the least bit squeamish, you&#38;rsquo;ve been warned!</description>
		   <pubDate>Thu, 10 Feb 2011 12:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
		   <media:credit role="producer">Link Media, Inc.</media:credit>
		   <dc:TGN>Europe </dc:TGN>
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		   <title>CINEMONDO: Laila's Birthday</title>
		   <link>http://www.linktv.org/worldcinema/blog/post/579/cinemondo-lailas-birthday</link>
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		   <description>I was just a young teen in Hebrew school when the 6-Day-War erupted on June 5, 1967 in the Middle East. I was relatively unaware of the political issues, but I do recall that a classmate questioned our teacher about Israel&#38;rsquo;s perspective and wondered if there wasn&#38;rsquo;t some merit to the Palestinian position. In short order, the young man was directed to the principal&#38;rsquo;s office and his parents were called in to review the matter with our rabbi. Seriously.At the time, my perception of the Middle East was largely informed by family, Passover seders and the1960 blockbuster EXODUS, starring Paul Newman. That film&#38;rsquo;s positive portrayal of Israel generated an unprecedented flow of donations and caused the Israeli government to create a film division to fund positive-message films. So goes the power of movies.Needless to say, a lot has happened since 1960 including a more complex cinematic consideration of Israel and Palestine. In just the past two years, several terrific films about the Middle East have been released including WALTZ WITH BASHIR, AJAMI, and the subject of this blog, &#60;a href="/programs/cinemondo-lailas-birthday" target="_blank"&#62;LAILA&#38;rsquo;S BIRTHDAY&#60;/a&#62;. Directed by Palestinian filmmaker Rashid Mashawari, LAILA vividly defines the social and societal consequences of living in the non-stop chaos that is Ramallah, a Palestinian city in the central West Bank (and Mashawari&#38;rsquo;s hometown).&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;The movie chronicles a day in the life of Abu Leila (Mohammed Bakri), a former judge who, due to a lack of funding for justices, is forced to drive his brother-in-law&#38;rsquo;s taxi. The movie begins at dawn when Abu is awakened with the loud crash of shattering glass. He immediately checks in on his 7-year-old daughter, Laila. She&#38;rsquo;s fine, but the crash foreshadows a rough day ahead. As he leaves for work, Abu&#38;rsquo;s wife has just one request: be home by 8pm to celebrate their daughter&#38;rsquo;s birthday.&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The clever conceit of the film is that we learn about Abu&#38;rsquo;s life in Ramallah from the passengers he picks up as well as those he declines. One passenger wants to go to an Israeli checkpoint, a request that a wary Abu refuses. Another hops out mid-journey when she spots a long line of people&#38;mdash;she&#38;rsquo;s desperately hoping that the queue is for food and other supplies. And yet another sits in the passenger seat next to Abu and asks, as if he were an old friend, whether she should go to the hospital (she has high blood pressure) or the cemetery (her husband has recently passed); Abu takes her to thehospital.While noisy helicopters patrol above and gunshots crackle on every corner, Abu struggles to maintain some sense of order and control. But it is not long before we begin to see a fissure in his professorial reserve. When Abu stops for gas, he observes drivers casually chatting with one another while traffic has stalled in both directions. The drivers seem oblivious to the cacophony of honking cars around them. This is when Abu finally loses control, grabs a police megaphone and vents. It&#38;rsquo;s the Palestinian equivalent of Peter Finch&#38;rsquo;s breakdown in NETWORK.There&#38;rsquo;s no question that social interactions in Ramallah have beenprofoundly affected by the absence of order and the constant threat ofviolence. And LAILA&#38;rsquo;S BIRTHDAY is remarkably successful at defining the extraordinary anxiety of an ordinary life in Palestine.</description>
		   <pubDate>Tue, 08 Feb 2011 12:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
		   <media:credit role="producer">Link Media, Inc.</media:credit>
		   <dc:TGN>Middle East </dc:TGN>
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		   <title>Love and War Among Russians and Kazakhs</title>
		   <link>http://www.linktv.org/worldcinema/blog/post/437/love-and-war-among-russians-and-kazakhs</link>
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		   <description>The culturally rich &#60;a href="/programs/song-from-the-southern-seas"&#62;SONG FROM THE SOUTHERN SEAS&#60;/a&#62;, from Kazakh director Marat Sarulu, has absolutely nothing to do with Kazakhstan&#38;rsquo;s most famous fictional character, Borat. And that&#38;rsquo;s a very good thing. While the movie has elements of humor, it is the divisive and tragic consequences of racism that are the focus here. As you sort through the rough and tumble among the ethnic diversities depicted&#38;mdash;Kazakhs, Cossacks, Russians, Germans and Kyrgyz &#38;mdash;it&#38;rsquo;s hard to imagine how the distrust and prejudice that has existed for millenniums will ever abate. I saw this movie just after writing my &#60;a href="/worldcinema/blog/post/579/cinemondo-lailas-birthday"&#62;blog&#60;/a&#62; about &#60;a href="/programs/cinemondo-lailas-birthday"&#62;LAILA&#38;rsquo;S BIRTHDAY&#60;/a&#62;, the quietly gripping film that captures the numbing chaos of life in Palestine. However, the scope of the cultural conflicts in Palestine seems dwarfed when compared to the more than 131 nationalities residing in Kazakhstan. Perhaps the most potent conflict is presented in the film&#38;rsquo;s opening moments when a dark skinned child is born to fair-skinned Russian farmers, Ivan and Marja, who just happen to have dark-skinned Kazakh neighbors. Tensions arise immediately.But this movie is not actually about the identity of the real father. While Ivan initially rejects his newborn son, Sasha, there is no question about the parents&#38;rsquo; love for him. Rather, it is Marja&#38;rsquo;s family, Russian Cossacks, who taunt the couple about Marja&#38;rsquo;s alleged infidelity. In one of the film&#38;rsquo;s especially well orchestrated sequences, Marja&#38;rsquo;s boorish brother inquires about Sasha and then summarily dismisses him: &#38;ldquo;he&#38;rsquo;s really not one of us&#38;rdquo;.Meanwhile, Sasha is unaware of the snub since he has run away to live among Kazakh horse herders just beyond the family farm. The film doesn&#38;rsquo;t reveal why he has left, but the notion of escape is presented as an option that cuts across generations and cultures. And little wonder. The sweeping majesty of the mountains that border the vast Great Steppe is undeniably alluring. This yearning for escape, however, is not without cost and sacrifice. As Ivan&#38;rsquo;s grandfather explains in a moving story about their family history, when one chooses to live among people who are culturally different, more is at stake than the wrenching sense of loss by the family left behind. There can be unanticipated challenges, some of them insurmountable. Ivan&#38;rsquo;s great grandfather, Alexander, who fell in love with a Kazakh woman, had to convert to Islam before her family would accept him. This involved shaving his head, becoming circumcised and adopting a Muslim identity. Not to mention a horse contest with a rival suitor. But that&#38;rsquo;s the least of it.In the sequence below, Alexander seeks protection for his family when he learns that the Czar, with the help of Cossack regiments, is committing massacres to combat the Kazakh revolt of 1916. In this Kazakh version of SOPHIE&#38;rsquo;S CHOICE, a decision must be made about the fate of Alexander&#38;rsquo;s children&#38;mdash;who will be saved and who will perish.&#160; The decision is based on the appearance of the child&#38;rsquo;s race. The scene, directed with considerable restraint, is a cinematic punch in the gut. Here is Alexander&#38;rsquo;s plea for his children&#38;rsquo;s safety as the Russian armies advance.&#160;&#60;a href="/video/5601/song-from-the-southern-seas-clip"&#62;&#60;/a&#62;&#60;a href="/video/5601/song-from-the-southern-seas-clip"&#62;&#60;/a&#62;&#13;&#10;&#60;a href="/video/5601/song-from-the-southern-seas-clip"&#62;Click to watch film clip&#60;/a&#62;&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;As he concludes the family history, Ivan&#38;rsquo;s grandfather remarks:&#160; &#38;ldquo;&#38;hellip;what holds life together is not force, Ivan, but love&#38;hellip;&#38;rdquo;.&#160; The comment comes as a surprise in the context of a culturally violent history. But it resonates strongly with Ivan and you sense that he has come upon a turning point in his life.While it is not long before we see Ivan and Marja running after one another in perceived animosity, they ultimately collapse in each other&#38;rsquo;s arms after exhausting themselves. This time, however, there are no consequential bruises or black eyes. What may look like domestic violence through the prism of a Eurocentric culture is more accurately an interaction that is farcical and slapstick. The physical engagement is no longer intended to harm; it is an expression of frustration among a people who have been raised accordingly. The director intends that you laugh when they&#38;rsquo;re done fighting and surprisingly you do.&#160; Interwoven throughout the film are shadow puppets that comment indirectly on the film&#38;rsquo;s narrative. They tell the story of a young man&#38;rsquo;s search for peace. It is a wish to be freed from grief and painful memories. Life may be tough on Ivan&#38;rsquo;s farm, but he and Marja are resilient, affectionate in their way, and sometimes even joyous. And Ivan&#38;rsquo;s grandfather certainly knows what he&#38;rsquo;s talking about when he shares his life lessons on love and war.</description>
		   <pubDate>Thu, 03 Feb 2011 12:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
		   <media:credit role="producer">Link Media, Inc.</media:credit>
		   <dc:TGN>Europe Asia </dc:TGN>
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		   <title>A Couple's Economic Unraveling, Italian Style</title>
		   <link>http://www.linktv.org/worldcinema/blog/post/415/a-couples-economic-unraveling-italian-style</link>
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		   <description>In 2009, movies finally began to present stories about the devastating impact of the current global economic crisis. The movie that grabbed the most attention and was hailed as capturing a zeitgeist moment on corporate downsizing was &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1193138/" target="_blank"&#62;UP IN THE AIR&#60;/a&#62;. Despite its acclaim and multiple predictions that it would be the one to beat at this year&#38;rsquo;s Oscar&#38;rsquo;s, it went home empty-handed. Truth be told, I wasn&#38;rsquo;t a big fan of the movie and thought its depiction of the economic crisis was more slick than illuminating. Where were the personal stories that showed the real devastation of job loss?Italy&#38;rsquo;s satisfying answer is &#60;a href="/programs/days-and-clouds"&#62;DAYS AND CLOUDS&#60;/a&#62;, directed by &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0812862/" target="_blank"&#62;Silvio Soldini&#60;/a&#62; (&#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0237539/" target="_blank"&#62;BREAD AND TULIPS&#60;/a&#62;, &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0402755/" target="_blank"&#62;AGATA AND THE STORM&#60;/a&#62;).&#160; It traces the harrowing economic descent of a sophisticated, upper-middle-class couple in Genoa after the husband loses his job. Flawless performances by &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0125540/" target="_blank"&#62;Margherita Buy&#60;/a&#62; and &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0016263/" target="_blank"&#62;Antonio Albanese&#60;/a&#62; as the couple (Elsa and Michele) keep us riveted as they attempt to grapple with their escalating fears about an unfathomable future.&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;All seems fine as the movie opens with a surprise celebration of Elsa&#38;rsquo;s graduation from an art history program.&#160; But when Elsa wakes up, Michele confesses that he hasn&#38;rsquo;t worked in months and they will probably have to sell their home. Elsa is furious at what she perceives as a betrayal of marital trust. While Michele explains that he did not want to distract her from her exams, it soon becomes clear that much more is at issue&#38;mdash;Michele&#38;rsquo;s unbearable shame for jeopardizing a way of life that he can no longer maintain.&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;The theme of shame runs deep as Elsa discovers her own inability to share the news with her daughter or close friends. The stress of these multiple non-disclosures begins to create a weight so heavy that the marriage starts to buckle under the strain. The pain is so palpable I felt my heart racing as fast as their downward tumble. I picked &#60;a href="/video/5458/cinemondo-days-and-clouds-clip"&#62;the clip below&#60;/a&#62; because it shows how the couple&#38;rsquo;s economic unraveling is beginning to invade all aspects of their life. It also highlights Michele&#38;rsquo;s state of denial and embarrassment as he pretends that everything is OK. In this scene, with the news of Michele&#38;rsquo;s job loss still fresh for Elsa, the simple act of picking up a dinner check with friends quickly devolves into an angry confrontation:&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;One review of this film suggests that Michele&#38;rsquo;s denial and anger are, in part, exacerbated be an &#38;ldquo;Italian machismo&#38;rdquo; that impairs his ability to cope with a surreal loss of stature. I&#38;rsquo;m not sure that&#38;rsquo;s correct. It seemed to me that Michele&#38;rsquo;s reaction was more universal and not necessarily affected by any cultural distinctions. Michele&#38;rsquo;s search for employment flows from denial to desperation so quickly that he has difficulty adjusting to a reality that finds him working odd jobs as a postal messenger and plaster/painter--anything to avoid the horror of doing nothing. Elsa must also adjust to a future that requires working two shifts as a secretary. And she discovers that she must make decisions about whether to consider alternate life choices including other men. A pass from a wealthy, attractive businessman is not so easily dismissed and the pain of this discovery is revealed in a breathless moment of sadness, vulnerability and desire.Film&#38;rsquo;s ending does, however, provide a glimmer of optimism and it is Elsa&#38;rsquo;s art restoration that serves as an apt metaphor: if you can scrape away the years of passive neglect that can camouflage a marriage, you may find, if you&#38;rsquo;re lucky, something very beautiful that has somehow managed to endure. Whether that&#38;rsquo;s true or not, we finally have a film that accurately captures the economic calamity that can happen to anyone. And it&#38;rsquo;s pretty scary.</description>
		   <pubDate>Wed, 02 Feb 2011 12:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
		   <media:credit role="producer">Link Media, Inc.</media:credit>
		   <dc:TGN>Europe </dc:TGN>
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		   <title>Love and Angst in Paris</title>
		   <link>http://www.linktv.org/worldcinema/blog/post/414/love-and-angst-in-paris</link>
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		   <description>When I think about Paris, I normally don&#38;rsquo;t think about subways. My Paris has sumptuous architecture, great restaurants, high fashion and intoxicating romance. And yet the Paris metro system is indeed the visual metaphor for the intersecting lives of five Parisians in Claire Denis&#38;rsquo;s latest award-winning film, &#60;a href="/programs/35-shots-of-rum"&#62;35 SHOTS OF RUM.&#60;/a&#62; While I missed seeing the city of lights in all its glory, those subway tracks had a mesmerizing effect and had me thinking about life choices and the potential dangers of changing course. There&#38;rsquo;s romance too, but it&#38;rsquo;s the kind of romance that causes unspoken internal stress and temporary immobility.As the story unfolds, we are witness to a critical turning point in the intimate relationship between a father and daughter. As each independently contemplates an inevitable separation (the daughter is a pretty college student with more than one suitor), a melancholy sadness is beginning to hover over both of them. In a relationship where a warm familial embrace can chase away the blues in an instant, the prospect of independence is generating a fair amount of anxiety.The film&#38;rsquo;s setting is a middle-class suburb of Paris where the father, Lionel (beautifully played by Alex Descas), works as a train conductor and his daughter Josephine (Mati Diop) is studying the politics of global economies. In the way Denis (BEAU TRAVAIL, CHOCOLAT) quietly captures the ordinary routines of their life together we begin to understand the extraordinary bond that exists between them. The magical quality of the film is found in how well we come to understand the characters despite minimal dialogue and not much narrative. As Josephine prepares dinner she can discern, simply from the familiarity of sounds that Lionel makes when he comes home from work, that everything in their world is just as it should be.Or is it? Josephine&#38;rsquo;s feelings for a handsome neighbor, Noe (Gregoire Colin), appear inhibited by her feelings of love and responsibility for Lionel, a widower. At the same time, Lionel gives Josephine conflicting messages about his independence and resilience. Lionel is equally ambivalent about the advances of a former lover, Gabrielle (Nicole Dogue), also a neighbor. In fact, it occurred to me that Lionel might view Gabrielle&#38;rsquo;s advances as a threat to his relationship with Josephine. Any therapist would have a field day here.In figuring out the best five-minute clip to share with you, I felt it had to be a moment that showcases Denis&#38;rsquo;s ability to communicate multiple messages where no words are spoken. In one of the more beautifully choreographed sequences of the movie, Lionel, Josephine, Noe and Gabrielle seek shelter at a caf&#233; when their car breaks down in a torrential rainstorm. &#60;a href="/video/5421/cinemondo-35-shots-of-rum-clip"&#62;In the following clip&#60;/a&#62;, Denis reveals the conflicting desires of each character with the skillful economy of furtive glances and quicksilver expressions of emotion:&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;The theme of inevitable change, and the wariness and pain that can accompany it, is depicted more directly in another intersecting story-- the retirement of one of Lionel&#38;rsquo;s colleagues, Ruben (Jean-Christophe Folly). A celebration of Ruben&#38;rsquo;s retirement is really the first step in his downward spiral that finds him incapable of establishing an adequate replacement for work and the friendship of colleagues. Like Lionel, Ruben doesn&#38;rsquo;t say much but we understand from his sad, hooded eyes and body fatigue that he is confronting a bleak future.Ruben&#38;rsquo;s story gave me chills. How often do we see retirement as a celebration when, in fact, the loss of purpose and social interaction is probably a perfect formula for depression? (Note: Another recent acquisition by Cinemondo, the brilliant film &#60;a href="/programs/days-and-clouds"&#62;DAYS AND CLOUDS&#60;/a&#62;, deals with the trauma of job loss and its devastating consequences as experienced by an upper-middle-class couple in Genoa. Highly recommended!). While the future for Lionel and Josephine is hardly as bleak as Ruben&#38;rsquo;s, Lionel does conclude that when their changed circumstances are at hand, it is finally time to have those 35 shots of rum. When it happens, my impulse was to simply say: Cheers!</description>
		   <pubDate>Tue, 01 Feb 2011 12:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
		   <media:credit role="producer">Link Media, Inc.</media:credit>
		   <dc:TGN>Europe </dc:TGN>
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		   <title>Iranian Director Jafar Panahi Released on Bail After Three-Month Imprisonment</title>
		   <link>http://www.linktv.org/worldcinema/blog/post/423/iranian-director-jafar-panahi-released-on-bail-after-threemonth-imprisonment</link>
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		   <description>Bowing to growing international outrage over the imprisonment of film director Jafar Panahi, the &#60;a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jHm5ykFxwLW2QYHDRvVqqEiFzuSwD9FTSH7G2" target="_blank"&#62;Iranian government has now released him on bail&#60;/a&#62;. Iranian state television announced that bail was set at $200,000, according to an article published at the &#60;a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/7764504/Iranian-director-Jafar-Panahi-released-from-prison-on-200000-bail.html" target="_blank"&#62;Telegraph.co.uk&#60;/a&#62;. No further information on Panahi&#38;rsquo;s release was immediately available.&#13;&#10;On March 1, 2010, &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0070159/" target="_blank"&#62;Jafar Panahi&#60;/a&#62;, one of Iran&#38;rsquo;s most celebrated and influential film directors, was arrested at his home for allegedly planning to make a film about the June 2009 election which returned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to office. On Sunday, May 16, while still being held in Tehran&#38;rsquo;s Evin prison, Panahi began a hunger strike after government officials apparently threatened to arrest his family.In a letter released by Panahi&#38;rsquo;s family on May 18, 2010, and published on the website &#60;a href="http://www.iranhumanrights.org/2010/05/iran-detained-director-jafar-panahi-on-hunger-strike/" target="_blank"&#62;IranHumanRights.org&#60;/a&#62;, Panahi stated:&#160; &#38;ldquo;On Saturday night [May 15, 2010], agents attacked Evin&#38;rsquo;s Cell 56, forcing me and my cellmates to go outdoors without any clothing and kept us in the cold weather for one and a half hours&#38;hellip; They even threatened to arrest my entire family and transfer them to Evin Prison and to send my daughter to an unsafe detention center in Rajaie Shahr.&#38;rdquo; On May 3, 2010 &#60;a href="http://www.indiewire.com/article/redford_scorsese_de_niro_coppola_call_on_iran_to_free_imprisoned_filmmaker/" target="_blank"&#62;Indiewire.com&#60;/a&#62; reported that Hollywood&#38;rsquo;s A-List directors had just signed a petition condemming Panahi&#38;rsquo;s detention and demanding his immediate release. Signatories included Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Jonathan Demme, Ang Lee and Oliver Stone.&#60;a href="http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=377089883062" target="_blank"&#62; Another petition&#60;/a&#62;, organized on Facebook, includes over 150 international filmmakers and is still accruing signatures online.Panahi was supposed to serve as a juror at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival and his absence did not go unnoticed. His juror&#38;rsquo;s chair was left vacant for the duration of the festival and &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0452102/" target="_blank"&#62;Abbas Kiarostami&#60;/a&#62;, in Cannes to screen his new movie &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1020773/" target="_blank"&#62;CERTIFIED COPY&#60;/a&#62;, called Panahi&#38;rsquo;s imprisonment &#38;ldquo;intolerable." According to the New York Times, Kiarostami also stated:&#160; &#38;ldquo;When a filmmaker, an artist, is imprisoned, it is art as a whole that is attacked, and it is against this that we should react.&#38;rdquo;&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;Another leading figure who played a key role in championing Panahi&#38;rsquo;s cause was film actor &#60;a href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000300/" target="_blank"&#62;Juliette Binoche&#60;/a&#62;, who won Best Actress at Cannes for CERTIFIED COPY. When she won her award, she held up a sign bearing Panahi&#38;rsquo;s name and said his only crime was &#38;ldquo;to be an artist, to be independent.&#38;rdquo;&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;More About PanahiPanahi achieved early acclaim with the release of his first film in 1995 &#38;mdash;-WHITE BALLOON -- which won a Camera d&#38;rsquo;Or at the Cannes Festival. When it opened in the U.S. shortly thereafter, it quickly became the most successful Iranian film ever released in North America. The film&#38;rsquo;s protagonist is a seven year-old girl who wants to buy a goldfish to celebrate Norooz, the Iranian New Year. We see the world through her eyes in real time as she attempts to navigate the &#38;ldquo;forbidden&#38;rdquo; Tehran marketplace on her own. Screenplay was by Abbas Kiarostami (THROUGH THE OLIVE TREES) for whom Panahi was an apprentice. Time Out London called the movie an &#38;ldquo;extraordinary debut feature&#38;hellip;of audacious subtlety and simplicity.&#38;rdquo; &#160;After its release, the Iranian government attempted to have the film withdrawn from the Oscar best foreign film category and prevented Panahi from leaving Iran to promote it. Panahi&#38;rsquo;s second feature, THE MIRROR, received the Golden Leopard Award at the Locarno Film Festival. This film, also dealing with the human experience of social injustice as experienced by children, tells the story of a young girl whose mother fails to pick her up from school. She must make her way home through the chaos of Tehran on her own. Halfway through the movie, the young actress breaks character and asserts that she&#38;rsquo;s tired of acting and the movie moves back and forth between illusion and reality. In his review, Stephen Holden of the N.Y. Times said the film &#38;ldquo;&#38;hellip;poses the deepest questions about illusion, reality and filmmaking. Its portrait of Tehran is unforgettable.&#38;rdquo;Panahi&#38;rsquo;s most widely recognized achievement in film came in 2000 with the release of THE CIRCLE, a movie that criticized the treatment of Iranian women. Panahi won the Golden Lion, the top prize at the Venice Film Festival, and the movie was hailed as the Film of the Year at the San Sebastian International Film Festival. The film involves the intersecting stories of Iranian women who are struggling with a variety of issues:&#160; giving birth to a girl when a boy was expected, navigating city streets where women are not supposed to walk by themselves, and facing death threats from family members over a possible abortion.&#160; Despite its international awards, the film was banned in Iran.&#160; In the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert explains:&#160; &#38;ldquo;&#38;hellip;the film is profoundly dangerous to the status quo in Iran because it asks us to identify with the plight of women who have done nothing wrong except to be female.&#38;rdquo;More recent films, such as CRIMSON GOLD in 2003 earned Panahi the Cannes Film Festival Jury Award. And in 2006, Panahi&#38;rsquo;s OFFSIDE won the Silver Bear (Jury Grand Prix) at the Berlin Film Festival. In the latter film, a group of Iranian women impersonate men so they can attend a World Cup soccer match.&#13;&#10;&#160;&#13;&#10;Updates on Panahi's case will be posted here.</description>
		   <pubDate>Tue, 25 May 2010 12:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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		   <dc:TGN>Middle East </dc:TGN>
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