Ottawa Citizen

Tune in to radio dreams

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com

RADIO DREAMS ★★★★ out of 5 Cast: Mohsen Namjoo, Kabul Dreams Director: Babak Jalali Duration: 1 h 33 min

It’s difficult to imagine a more jarring clash of cultures than in this sweet indie story from Iranian-born writer-director Babak Jalali. A tiny, Farsi-language radio station in San Francisco has arranged an on-air meeting between transplant­ed Afghan rock band (played by the actual band Kabul Dreams) and the heavy-metal gods of Metallica.

I don’t know if Jalali has spent any time watching WKRP in Cincinnati reruns, but PARS-FM has a similarly eclectic staff.

Hamid (Mohsen Namjoo) is a frustrated writer with a mane of white hair and a hand-sanitizer fixation, whose idea of ideal programmin­g is a talk on Salvadoran poet Roque Dalton.

The station’s owner thinks one of the band members would make a better wrestler and sets out to train him. His beautiful daughter (think Loni Anderson but Persian) has another band member falling hard. Meanwhile, Metallica is conspicuou­sly absent.

Jalali ushers us through the day in a well-crafted 93 minutes, sometimes cutting away from the station’s activities to show a U.S. news outlet interviewi­ng Hamid about his life and career. And we’re treated to live commercial­s for local ethnic restaurant­s and a bizarre listeners-stories segment called “Iranian Days,” in which Hamid switches to a falsetto to tell the tale of an immigrant troubled by the sudden appearance of the penguin at her door.

It wouldn’t do to say whether Metallica ever makes an appearance, but that is no more relevant than whether Kabul Dreams’ trio finds true love or switches from bass guitar to wrestling.

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