New Straits Times

Arich, lAyered tAle

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AT its simplest, is about a woman, Rana (Taraneh Alidoosti), who is attacked in the shower and how her husband, Emad (Shahab Hosseini), deals with the incident.

The couple is also into theatre and in the midst of staging Arthur Miller’s

That tale is about cultural change in a post-WWII New York setting, when rapid modernisat­ion affects people who are still stuck to old notions of societal traditions. It’s an adapt-or-die situation.

Under Oscar-winning Asghar Farhadi’s screenplay and direction for the Miller play has parallels to what is going on in the personal realm of this middle-class Iranian couple.

For instance, Emad and Rana play the roles of the salesman and his wife on stage but off-stage, they eventually have to face a salesman as the bad guy — and decide his fate.

According to the production notes, Iran and its capital Teheran is undergoing modernisat­ion, with its people facing the new-versus-traditiona­l changes that Miller’s society had to decades ago.

This movie, which won the 2017 Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, is a thoughtful study of relationsh­ips, especially between a couple, and is a richly-layered story.

The movie opens with Emad and Rana moving out of their apartment due to structural faults. With the help of theatre friend Babak (Babak Karimi), they move into an apartment he owns.

Emadisanen­gagingteac­her at a boys’ school while Rana seems to be a true thespian and housewife. She readies the apartment as Emad is busy with his work, and that’s when the assault happens.

Watch the couple change. Emad is slowly consumed by the incident, while Rana deals with the shame in a traditiona­l don’t-tell manner. She doesn’t even want to make a police report.

It’s an emotional movie with feelings quietly delivered through restrained gestures and subtle expression­s that sear. Hosseini, who won the 2011 Berlin Film Festival’s

Asghar Farhadi Shahab Hosseini, Taraneh Alidoosti, Babak Karimi

124 minutes

PG 13

Silver Bear for Best Actor for A Separation, delivers convincing­ly the metamorpho­sis of a gentle man to one with murderous intent.

Alidoosti infuses Rana’s dove-like character with complex emotions, hurt against her husband, love for someone else’s child, and empathy for her attacker.

The pace of the story might need popcorn to sustain attention but the suspensefu­l revelation of the bad guy is startling enough to keep you glued to the big screen.

I found a haunting watch. Was Rana raped? You need to answer that yourself.

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