Provocative and formally daring.
Crimson Gold (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:71
Fresh:62
Rotten:9
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: A slow-burning, riveting film about Iranian class differences.
Theatrical Release:Jan 16, 2004 Limited
Synopsis: Crimson Gold, directed by Jafar Panahi and written by Abbas Kiarostami, tells the story of an ordinary pizza deliveryman named Hussein (Hussein Emadeddin), and his journey navigating the dark... Crimson Gold, directed by Jafar Panahi and written by Abbas Kiarostami, tells the story of an ordinary pizza deliveryman named Hussein (Hussein Emadeddin), and his journey navigating the dark injustices of Teheran - from the dirty, downtown “souk” neighborhood to the wealthy, uptown enclaves of the city. The opening scene, an amazing four-minute, camera-steady shot, shows a gun-toting Hussein taking over an upscale jewelry shop, killing the shop owner, and then shooting himself. This grisly scene sets the story for a re-examination of the events that led Hussein to this destructive explosion. Panahi attempts to understand how a simple, shy and good-hearted guy like Hussein could be brought to such violence. Hussein is engaged to the sister of his closest friend, Ali. They decide to go to a jewelry shop after Ali’s discovery of a handbag with a broken wedding ring and a receipt for an expensive imported necklace. Eager to see where such an expensive necklace is sold, they arrive at the shop and are turned away for their working class appearance. Ali suggests returning in their best suits with Hussein's fiancée, to see whether there is anything they can afford. When they realize they don’t have enough money, and when the shop’s owner insults them by suggesting they go to the bazaar for gold, they feel a complete sense of humiliation. In a breathtaking shot we see Hussein on his motorbike, silent and angry, whirring through Teheran’s busy streets. Panahi follows Hussein and his deliveries, letting us see the different people and rushes Hussein to take his Vespa and leave. In another, a cocky policeman refuses him entry to an apartment building for a pizza delivery while a police force waits downstairs to ambush party guests on a charges of drinking alcohol and dancing in mixed company. Resigned and again humiliated, he passes the pizza amongst the soldiers and the arrested partygoers in a scene of dark humor. Soon after, at a luxury apartment building, Hussein makes a delivery to a wealthy bachelor. After telling Hussein that his girlfriend has left him, the gentleman invites Hussein in and over pizza regales him with stories of his wealthy life. Hussein eyes the trappings of his wealth: a winged piano, a gym and a swimming pool. Next we see Hussein in the jewelry shop, where we found him in the film’s first scene, defeated and ready for violence. Panahi uses Hussein's job as a delivery driver to move inside houses and behind closed doors to reveal places rarely seen by western audiences; what emerges is both a daring interrogation of Iranian society and a universal tale of urban alienation and inequality. -- © Wellspring [More]
Starring: Hussein Emadeddin, Kamyar Sheissi, Pourang Nakhayi, Azita Rayeji
Starring: Hussein Emadeddin, Kamyar Sheissi, Pourang Nakhayi, Azita Rayeji, Shahram Vaziri, Ehsan Amani, Kaveh Najmabadi, Saber Safael
Director: Jafar Panahi
Director: Jafar Panahi
Screenwriter: Abbas Kiarostami
Producer: Jafar Panahi
Composer: Peyman Yazdanian
Studio: Wellspring
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Reviews for Crimson Gold
an artful failure, a moped-fueled odyssey into dramatic weariness and monotony
If you liked the Iranian films you've seen, you'll probably like Crimson Gold. If you didn't, you won't.
Its cumulative power will smack viewers with all the force of a rattlesnake to the cheek.
Crimson Gold is a courageous Iranian film by director Jafar Panahi that conveys the harsh realities of contemporary Teheran and the chasm between the rich and the poor.
Jafar Panahi’s “Crimson Gold” is a worthy entry into the pantheon of that country’s contribution to the art of filmmaking.
Panahi's latest film about the downtrodden of Iran explores the humiliations of class distinction...a thought provoking film
There's an energetic cynicism here that makes this quite different from most recent Iranian films -- funnier, harsher, bleaker.
An engrossing tale of class differences that reveals tiny details of one man’s descent into hell.
This tough, bristling story about a working-class man pushed over the edge vividly brings to mind the great Hollywood social dramas of the 1930s.
The success of Crimson Gold depends to an intriguing degree on the performance of its leading actor.
Probes a society uneasily layered and fearful, neither quite modern nor medieval.
It offers a rare glimpse into the lives of the Iranian wealthy. And it does so in the service of a surprisingly bleak, radically class-conscious vision of Iranian life.
Panahi seems at last to speak with his own beguiling, cryptically beautiful expressiveness, which grows ever more absorbing with each of its purposefully irresolute turns.
Not an overtly political filmmaker, Panahi's intense and intimate portrayals of people trapped, like Hussein, behind visible and invisible barriers are oblique but nevertheless scathing commentaries on Iranian society.
A fable of money as the root of jealousy, discord, violence, but the film's slippery fascination as sociological exposé is the flip side of its thinness as drama.
The film comprises a series of events, all mundane and seemingly random, that steadily coheres into a single, multifaceted image by the film’s end.
Every scene in Crimson Gold evokes Iranian oppression and, much more cunningly, the nasty “you are either with us or against us” mentality of the United States after 9/11.
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