Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary supplies the following definitions of the word guilt: 1) the fact of having committed a breach of conduct esp. violating law and involving a penalty; broadly: guilty conduct 2a: the state of one who has committed an offense esp. consciously b: feelings of culpability esp. for imagined offenses or from a sense of inadequacy: self-reproach. What the definitions don’t address is the festering psychological fallout from this condition that can result in a loss of self-esteem and possibly derail more than one person’s life. You couldn’t find a better illustration of this than Bedoone Tarikh, Bedoone Emza (English title: No Date, No Signature, 2017), an award-winning drama from Iranian director Vahid Jalilvand.
Tag Archives: Iranian cinema
Boy on a Mission
Qassam is a ten-year old living in the Iranian town of Malayer who is obsessed with soccer. When he isn’t skipping classes at school to play the game in back alleys, he is stealing money from his mother’s secret hiding place to buy soccer magazines. Considering the limited career choices available to Qassam after he finishes school, it is no wonder why soccer serves as the boy’s escape from reality. And his obsession becomes all-consuming when he learns that his favorite soccer team is coming to Tehran (which is approximately 385 miles away). He begins scheming of ways to raise the money required for the bus and game tickets. This is the basic premise of Abbas Kiarostami’s Mossafer (English title: The Traveler, 1974), which is both a parable about wanting something too much as well as an unsentimental portrait of an alienated and problematic kid in the tradition of Francois Truffaut’s The 400 Blows (1959).
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