The Song of Sparrows

Horizons 2008 / Avaze gonjeshk-ha / Iran 2008

Karim, a peasant, loses his job and starts work in Teheran ferrying people and deliveries on motorbike in order to provide for his family. Will he be able to resist the influences that threaten his hitherto safe and simple world? This distinctive reminiscence of De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves (1948) offers a metaphor for the endangered world of pure values. For his performance, Reza Najie was awarded a Silver Bear at this year’s Berlinale.

The Song of Sparrows

Synopsis

Karim is sacked from the ostrich farm where he works and goes to Teheran to be able to provide for his beloved wife, Narges, and their three children. By chance, fortune finds him a moped taxi, and he begins weaving his way through the busy streets of Teheran, taking his clients where they want to go. Karim’s contact with this new world cannot go on for long without consequences. Will he be able to resist the influences that threaten his hitherto safe and simple world? Seasoned director Majid Majidi offers up distinctive reminiscences of Italian neo-realism, particularly of De Sica’s masterpiece Bicycle Thieves. In a story about how civilisation and technology can destroy a man, he uses amateur actors as a medium through which he pits the big-city environment against his protagonist’s world of pure values: family, friends and nature. This metaphorical fable of moral corruption and redemption that avoids sentiment and wagers on the lightly humorous lyricism of everyday life, won the actor playing Karim, Reza Naji, a Silver Bear at this year’s Berlinale.

About the film

96 min / Color, 35 mm

Director Majid Majidi / Screenplay Majid Majidi, Mehran Kashani / Dir. of Photography Tooraj Mansoouri / Music Hossein Alizadeh / Editor Hassan Hassandoost / Producer Majid Majidi / Production Majidi Film Production / Cast Reza Naji, Maryam Akbari, Kamran Dehghan, Hamed Aghazi / Contact Fortissimo Films

About the director

Majid Majidi

Majid Majidi (b. 1959, Teheran) studied acting and worked for a number of years as an actor on both the stage and screen. He began filming documentaries and shorts in the 1980s. In 1995 he debuted with a drama about kidnapping, Baduk, which was inspired by actual events. His tragicomedy Children of Heaven (Bacheha-ye aseman, 1997) won the prize for Best Film in Montreal, was nominated for an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film and in his native Iran was the biggest box-office hit of all time. He also filmed the drama The Father (Pedar, 1996 – Jury Prize at the San Sebastian IFF), the story of a blind boy The Colour of Paradise (Rang-e khoda, 1999), the love story Baran (2001), screened at the KVIFF in 2002, and the existentialist drama The Willow Tree (Beed-e majnoon, 2005).

Contacts

Fortissimo Films
Van Diemenstraat 100, 1013 CN, Amsterdam
Netherlands
Phone: +31 206 273 215
Fax: +31 206 261 155
E-mail: info@fortissimo.nl

Guests

Winnie Lau
Buyer