Banu Film

Gilaneh

Color, 35mm, 84 min, 2005, Iran

Synopsis

The New Year’s Eve and the Iran-Iraq war, Tehran is being repeatedly attacked with missiles. Gilaneh, a lonely middle-aged villager has to send her son to the war. She must also accompany her daughter to Tehran in search of her son-in-law, who has illegally left the service…
15 years later: again the New Year’s Eve, and Gilaneh – fatigued with life – is taking care of her chemically-wounded son and is also far away from her daughter. Incapable of looking after her son, Gilaneh is waiting for a woman from the South who has lost her husband in the war and made a promise to get married to Gilaneh’s son…
This film depicts people whose love and destiny have been violated and changed by war.

Aghanoo Short Fiction by Mahmoud Rahmani Noori Film Production

Cast & Crew

Director Rakhshan Banietemad & Mohsen Abdolvahab

Script Writers Rakhshan Banietemad, Farid Mostafavi, Mohsen Abdolvahab

Director of Photography Morteza Poursamadi

Editors Davood Yousefian

Music Mohammad-Reza Aligholi

Sound Mix  Mohammad-Reza Delpak, Amir-Hossein Ghasemi 

Cast Fatemeh Motamed Arya, Bahram Radan, Baran Kosari, Jaleh Sameti,
Shahrokh Forootanian, Majid Bahrami

Music Composer Saba Nedaei

Production Designer Jila Mehrjui

Sound Recorder Yadollah Najafi

Cast Tahmina Rafaella (Banu), Melek Abbaszadeh (Mahira), Zaur Shafiyev (Javid), Jafar Hasan (Taleh), Kabira Hashimli (Farida), Emin Asgarov (Ruslan)

Production Manager Seyyed Abolghasem Hosseini

Assistant Director Nava Rohani

Executive Producer  Jahangir Kosari

Producer  Saeid Saadi

Banu Film

Festivals

Fajr Film Festival
Toronto International Film Festival<br />
Tribeca Film Festival<br />

Rakhshan Banietemad

Film Review Variety by deborah young 2005

A close-up look at a woman’s suffering, “Gilaneh” is a strikingly photographed character-centered drama oozing moral integrity, but also bleakly anguishing to watch. Iran’s premier femme helmer Rakshan Bani-Etemad smoothly teams with long-time collaborator Mohsen Abdolvahab and actress Fatemeh Motamed Arya to tell the tale of an Iranian Mother Courage whose beloved only son returns from the Iran-Iraq war a helpless invalid, and lives to see the Iraqi war waged by the U.S. and its allies. Most topical in its anti-war message, it will need strong critical support to move beyond probable fest prizes to larger audiences.
We first meet Gilaneh (Motamed Arya), a simple country woman, on Iranian New Year’s 1988, when the Iraqis are targeting Teheran with missiles. Her handsome son Ishmael (Bahram Radan), engaged to be married, is off to the war to the sound of patriotic music blaring from the loudspeaker on a truckbed, while her headstrong pregnant daughter Maygol (Baran Kosari) insists on making the dangerous journey to Teheran to meet her husband, who has deserted.
In a neat temporal division, first half of pic traces Gilaneh and Maygol’s hair-raising trip on foot and bus to the city, which everyone else is fleeing. The closer they get, the greater their apprehension over what they might find in the young couple’s home.
Second half is set on New Year’s fifteen years later: precisely, on March 20, 2003, the day the United States began bombing Baghdad. Showing her years, Gilaneh cares for her bedridden son, who has been wounded in the war by chemical weapons and whose health is constantly deteriorating. A kindly one-armed doctor (Shahrokh Frottanian) can do nothing to persuade her to allow the son to go to a veteran’s home. Instead, she stubbornly clings to the impossible dream of marrying him off to a war widow from a distant town.
Entire film hinges around Motamed Arya’s extraordinarily vital perf as the selfless mother who won’t give up, but whose obsession also has darker overtones. She is one of those people who has lived through a key moment in history and been stranded in a noisy, banal modern world that doesn’t recognize her sacrifice. Only towards film’s end does her shrill cheerfulness ring a little hollow, as she descends into a pathos that ought to have been avoided. Kosari glows with foolish intensity as her lovelorn daughter.
On another level, however, the film is a powerful reflection on the current war in Iraq. The enormous pain and losses that Saddam Hussein’s war machine inflicted on innocent Iranians like Gilaneh is at once vindicated by the American bombs and repeated in all its horror. “Live by the sword, die by the sword,” comments one character gruffly. But the heroine’s great heart is certainly not bent on vengeance; for Gilaneh, the new war is irrelevant and she keeps switching off the TV set. Wisely, the film refrains from direct comment, but the moral conundrum is there for those viewers who want to take it up.
The intense acting and emotion often shout theater, but dispelling the stagey feeling is cinematographer Morteza Poursamadi’s sensual grasp of place, imbuing the wind-swept green hills of Gilaneh’s farm country with feeling and meaning. The striking visuals help but don’t fully compensate for a lack of story momentum, however, particularly in the second part.