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Mixed reaction to Narges Abyar’s film ‘Nafas’, or ‘Breath’, shows how art cuts across Iranian politics

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movie about a young girl whose fantasy world helps her escape the hard realities of growing up in the countrysid­e near Tehran in the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic Revolution is Iran’s first nominee for the Academy Awards’ foreign film directed by a woman.

But not everyone is celebratin­g.

The mixed reaction to Narges Abyar’s film Nafas ,or Breath, shows how art cuts across Iranian politics, both at home and abroad.

Hardliners have criticised the movie, and it remains unclear whether Abyar and her husband would even be able to get a visa to attend the Oscars in March under President Donald Trump’s travel bans.

Yet the 47-year-old director and writer Abyar remains confident in the power of art to bridge cultural and political divides.

“Cinema, culture and art do not recognise any border, but in fact bring humanity closer together,” she said in a recent interview.

Breath focuses on Bahar, a lively girl whose Actress Gelareh Abbasi (right) in a scene from ‘Nafas’ or ‘Breath’.

asthmatic father is bringing her and her siblings up on his own, with the help from the children’s religious grandmothe­r.

The film shows the rapid changes that hit Iran after the Islamic Revolution, and later, as Scud missiles fall, Iraq’s invasion of Iran and the start of the ruinous eightyear war.

Parts of the film take place in Bahar’s imaginatio­n as she tries to escape the hardship around her.

“Don’t let her read so much. She’ll go crazy,” the grandmothe­r tells Bahar’s dad in a scene shown in the film’s trailer.

“Granny is right,” Bahar later muses. “You go crazy when you read books a lot.”

Abyar acknowledg­es she made an anti-war film.

“The only thing that could destroy her fantasies and imaginatio­n was war,” Abyar said of Bahar’s character.

“This film shows us the obscene face of war that we should avoid, this is what politician­s won’t tell you,” she added.

Not surprising­ly, the film’s topics have proven controvers­ial for Iran’s hard-liners.

They have unleashed criticism on Abyar, despite the fact that her first film, Shiar 143 or Track 143, earned her hardliners’ praise for focusing on the role of mothers during the Iran-Iraq war.

“This movie is showing exactly what our enemies in the West want to see,” said hardline cleric Ahmad Alamolhoda, an ally of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani, now in his second term in office, has promised to increase women’s participat­ion in film, though it isn’t clear whether his pledge helped tip the scales and win Abyar the nomination for Breath.

Art can be a dangerous profession in Iran and filmmakers have fallen into trouble before.

Award-winning Iranian filmmaker Keywan Karimi was released in April, after serving about five months of his year-long sentence over his work, though he escaped the 223 lashes that were part of his sentence. He later said that he doesn’t know whether he’ll make Narges Abyar. Abyar (right) directs a scene of her film . movies again in the country.

Internatio­nal politics also comes into play in Iran’s cinema.

Last year, Iranian director Asghar Farhadi won his second Oscar with his film The Salesman, but declined to attend the award ceremony because of Trump’s travel ban. But even he faces criticism from hardliners and has been working on his next film outside of the country.

For Abyar, she and her husband would attend the awards if they are granted visas.

“We should go for a language that brings nations closer together, not the language of hatred or the one that creates a gap between nations,” she said.

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 ?? Photos by Reuters and AP ??
Photos by Reuters and AP
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