Notes and Ranking of all 11 features of Jafar Panahi to date:
The White Balloon (1995)
The Mirror (1997)
The Circle (2000)
Crimson Gold (2003)
Offside (2006)
This Is Not a Film (2011)
Closed Curtain (2013)
Taxi (2015)
3 Faces (2018)
No Bears (2022)
It Was Just an Accident (2025)
Jafar Panahi’s 2025 Palme d’Or win at Cannes for It Was
Just an Accident means he is only one of four directors (Robert Altman,
Michelangelo Antonioni and Henri-Georges Clouzot being the other 3) to have won
top awards at Berlin, Cannes and Venice. Panahi won the Golden Bear at Berlin
with Taxi in 2015 and the Golden Lion at Venice in 2000 with The
Circle. The fact that two of have these awards have come in the last
decade is incredible especially after Panahi’s 2010 sentence in Iran which raised fears that he may never direct a film
again. However, he and his entire film crew and cast have shown incredible
courage and creativity to not only get films made but also getting them
released out of Iran.
Jafar Panahi started running into problems with authorities
from his earlier films two decades ago. The reason for that stems from Panahi depicting
social topics and plight of characters (especially women) who don’t have a
voice. In this brilliant interview with Doug Saunders (from back in 2007) Panahi
mentions reveals the following:
Panahi’s stand back then and even now is staying in Iran and
making films. His films are some of the finest made in the history of cinema
despite working with barriers and restrictions other filmmakers may never
encounter.
Ranking his films feels inappropriate. All 11 of his
features are remarkable works of art. Each of them present fascinating ideas to
ponder upon and highlight perspective that one may not think of. So this
ranking is a personal preference, one that has shifted over the years and will
likely still change.
Ranking all 11 of Jafar Panahi’s films:
1. Crimson Gold (2003, Director Jafar Panahi, Writer
Abbas Kiarostami)
This brilliant film about class difference is also one of
the most incredible cinematic collaborations in history with Panahi directing a
story written by maestro Abbas Kiarostami.
2. The Circle (2000)
After his first two children themed films, Panahi changed gears
completely with this insightful powerful film which depicts the treatment of
women in Iranian society. This ranges from the inability of women to travel without
the permission (or presence) of a male figure to women not being able to speak
freely or live on their own terms. Any infringements against the patriarchal
society means that women find themselves thrown into prison. This film
completes a circle with Panahi’s recent film It Was Just an Accident which
discusses the harsh treatment that both women and men get in prison. It is safe to assume that after The Circle,
Panahi put himself on the Iranian authorities list.
3. This Is Not a Film (2011, Mojtaba Mirtahmasb/Jafar
Panahi)
The first film that Panahi made after his filmmaking ban is the
next evolution in his cinema as this film shows that in the hands of a talented
filmmaker even a tiny, confined space can be a liberating cinematic experience.
The final moments capture those magical moments that Werner Herzog has claimed
happen only when the camera is left recording just a little bit longer.
4. Taxi (2015)
Taxi is the third film Jafar Panahi crafted after
he was banned from making films by the Iranian Government in 2010. Like This
Is Not a film, the first film Panahi made under the ban, Taxi
does not appear to be a scripted film and hence, not a film also.
Taxi features Jafar Panahi driving a taxi
around the streets of Tehran, picking up passengers and dropping them off at
different locations. All the interactions with passengers are recorded from a
camera on his dashboard, so technically, Panahi is not directing anything.
However, the inclusion of smart dialogues, shift in camera angles and the
presence of a few memorable passengers reveals Panahi’s brilliance. Pushed into
a corner by the government, Panahi has tapped into the same creative energy as The
White Balloon and Crimson Gold; films he directed before
the ban. He uses a taxi as a medium to bring forth relevant discussions about
society, freedom, censorship, public vs private space and even film
distribution while also paying a tribute towards Abbas Kiarostami’s Ten
(2002), which featured a female driver.
5. The White Balloon (1995, co-written by Abbas Kiarostami,
Jafar Panahi and Parviz Shahbazi)
6. The Mirror (1997)
Jafar Panahi’s first two features The White Balloon
and The Mirror are the purest examples of the exciting Iranian
New Wave cinema that started making waves in the 1990s.
Both films are presented from a little child’s perspective,
much like Abbas Kiarostami’s earlier films. In fact, The White Balloon
is co-written by Kiarostami. In many aspects, The White Balloon and
The Mirror are similar but diverge when the 4th wall
is shattered half-way through The Mirror. After that point
onwards, The Mirror becomes a meta film about filmmaking echoing
some aspects of Kiarostami’s Close Up.
7. It Was Just an Accident (2025)
The topic of justice and retribution feels more like that of
a Mohammad Rasoulof’s film, especially The Seed of the Sacred Fig
and There Is No Evil, but Panahi has mentioned in interviews the story came from the experience he heard of other prisoners and also from his own experience in prison. The film sheds a light on trauma and suffering that individuals
face under an oppressive system that feels like a living breathing example of
The Stanford Prison Experiment, an experiment that many Latin, Asian and African
countries started facing from the 1970s onward. Panahi’s film shows that the experiment
isn’t over yet and even if it were over tomorrow, it would take decades (or
generations) for citizens to heal.
8. No Bears (2022)
Panahi travels to the Iranian border and shows how a film
can be potentially directed remotely, an appropriate nod to our times where
remote work has become a lot more commonplace across the globe.
9. 3 Faces (2018)
3 Faces is the fourth film Panahi made since
his filmmaking ban and was the first since that ban where he left Tehran for
the countryside. This travel allows some cultural and political conversations
to enter the frame and the end result is one of Panahi’s strongest works, one
that even has a nod to the late master Abbas Kiarostami’s films.
10. Offside (2006)
This film is an extension of The Circle in depicting
the restrictions women face in Iranian society. In Offside, Panahi
shows how female soccer fans are not allowed to watch games in the stadium
alongside men. The film contains plenty of magical moments such as the nervous
expression on one of the girl's face as she tries to sneak into the stadium,
the passion with which the guard narrates a running commentary for the girls
who are held in custody and the mesmerizing moment when we finally see the
beautiful green soccer field. The best part of the film unfold in the last
15-20 minutes where the camera highlights the emotions and expressions of fans
who are delighted at Iran's qualification for the 2006 World Cup -- there is
very little dialogue, and we can see unscripted human emotion on display.
11. Closed Curtain (2013)
Following This Is Not a Film, Panahi shows
another creative way to make a film despite his ban. As per the title, the
film takes place in a house with the curtains shut. What at first appears to be
a tranquil setting turns out to be anything but that.
No comments:
Post a Comment