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September 13, 2011
by Littleblackfish

‘A Separation’ and a new form of censorship in film

Tomorrow, the Cinema Office of Iran’s Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance must decide on the country’s submission for the Best Foreign Language Film for the 2012 Oscars. The obvious choice would be A Separation, director Asghar Frahadi’s latest film that screened worldwide this year with overwhelming success. In An Iranian Movie ‘Masterpiece’…And why it may not make it to the Oscars, Ali Chenar presents the convoluted issues and politics at play, exposing a whole new dimension to censorship of film in Iran.

Of course the impact on any artist attempting to pursue their work in this industry is manifold. This month saw the US release of the controversial Circumstance (winner of Sundance Audience Award 2011), a film exploring lesbian love in Iran, and director Maryam Keshavarz felt compelled to make a “goodbye” trip to the country as soon as the work was complete, on the clear understanding that she would become a target of the regime once it was released. The official trailer ends with “Let no love fall victim to circumstance. Freedom is a human right.” And circumstance is exactly what filmmakers must constantly overcome — in the choices that they make and the reality that ensues.

Award-winning director Jafar Panahi under house arrest since December 2010, with an imposed 20-year ban on making films, has bravely played with the limitations of this ban by collaborating on This Is Not A Film, a film poignantly showing the banality of Panahi’s life under house arrest. The film was smuggled out of Iran on a USB pen and screened at Cannes this year. The reels keep turning.

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Posted Under Iran Littleblackfish Middle East and North Africa A Separation censorship film Iran Jafar Panahi Mojtaba Mirtahmasb This Is Not A Film

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    Iran, a nation of 77 million people, has been ruled as an Islamic Republic since the 1979 revolution, which ousted the regime of Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. The country's complex system of government combines religious and political leadership, with the supreme leader selected from among religious scholars. The current supreme leader, Ali Hosseini-Khamenei, succeeded Ayatollah Khomenei after his death in 1989.


    Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is regarded as ultra-conservative, and during his time in office the country has seen its international relations worsen considerably. Inside Iran, citizens are subject to strict religious codes regarding many aspects of life, from dress to music to literature. Iran's population is young and web-literate, but the government retains close surveillance of online activity.

    Little Black Fish started out at the Camden New Journal, worked as sub editor for The Point Newspaper in The Gambia, associate editor for Colors Magazine "about the rest of the world" in Italy and copy editor for BBC Monitoring Service. She has travelled to the shores of 30 lands for youth development charity Raleigh International and worked with refugees in London for the British Red Cross.

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