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Blackboards (2002)
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Reviews Counted:34
Fresh:25
Rotten:9
Average Rating:6.8/10
Theatrical Release:Dec 6, 2002 Limited
Synopsis:
A group of male teachers crosses the mountainous paths of the remote Iranian Kurdistan region. Carrying large blackboards on their backs, they wander from village to village in search of students....
A group of male teachers crosses the mountainous paths of the remote Iranian Kurdistan region. Carrying large blackboards on their backs, they wander from village to village in search of students. The sudden menacing sound of overhead helicopters forces the men to run and seek refuge from an unseen enemy ... One teacher, Reeboir, ventures
away from the group and confronts a group of adolescent boys who who
dangerously transport contraband goods between Iran and Iraq.
Reeboir tries to convince the boys of the advantages of learning to read and write, but none of them are interested. There is no time for reading. They are too busy risking their lives to survive ... Said, another teacher also now traveling alone, arrives in a seemingly deserted village.
No one responds to his calls soliciting his services as a teacher. He persists, but is greeted only by slamming doors and windows ... Said later meets a group of 100 or so old men accompanied by a sole young woman and child. They, too, are closed and uninterested in learning.
Tired and hungry, the old men aimlessly continue their search to return to their native land to die in peace ... One of the old men feels he can only find peace if his young widowed daughter, Halaleh, marries before his death. Said has only his blackboard to offer in exchange for her hand iAfter the chemical bombing of Halabcheh in Iraq a number of Kurd refugee teachers seek for pupils who are willing to educate around the border as they carry their blackboards like Jesus’ crosses. One of them encounters a group of teenage smugglers and tries to convince them to educate as they carry their heavy backpacks full of smuggled stuff. The other teacher encounters a group of old and tired men, whom after years of migration are going to their own country to die there. But it seems that hunger and insecurity has not leftand chance for the education of the generations. -- © Kimstim
Starring: Bahman Ghobadi, Said Mohamadi, Behnaz Jafari, Rafat Moradi Kleur
Starring: Bahman Ghobadi, Said Mohamadi, Behnaz Jafari, Rafat Moradi Kleur
Director: Samira Makhmalbaf
Director: Samira Makhmalbaf
Screenwriter: Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Producer: Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Marco Muller
Composer: Mahamed Reza Darvishi
Studio: Kimstim
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Reviews for Blackboards
Makmalbaf follows a resolutely realistic path in this uncompromising insight into the harsh existence of the Kurdish refugees of Iran's borderlands.
An intelligent, multi-layered and profoundly humanist (not to mention gently political) meditation on the values of knowledge, education, and the affects of cultural and geographical displacement.
A stark metaphor about diasporic people wandering aimlessly through rocky, desolate terrain, buffeted by unseen forces beyond their control.
Reeboir varies between a sweet smile and an angry bark, while Said attempts to wear down possible pupils through repetition. It has no affect on the Kurds, but it wore me down.
An engrossing Iranian film about two itinerant teachers and some lost and desolate people they encounter in a place where war has savaged the lives and liberties of the poor and the dispossessed.
An austere, haunting tone poem about how, amid the ravages of conflict, the most persistent battle of all pits the aspiration to be human against the baser needs to survive.
Both shrill and soporific, and because everything is repeated five or six times, it can seem tiresomely simpleminded.
Like many Iranian filmmakers, Makhmalbaf prefers ambiguity to agitprop in her approach to politically contentious subject matter, but the results are still bracing and affecting.
That is essentially what's missing from Blackboards -- the sense of something bigger, some ultimate point.
does paint some memorable images ..., but Makhmalbaf keeps her distance from the characters
Samira Makhmalbaf’s new film Blackboards is much like the ethos of a stream of consciousness, although, it’s unfortunate for the viewer that the thoughts and reflections coming through are torpid and banal
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