26 Apr 2024
Wednesday 18 January 2023 - 22:34
Story Code : 403463

The Runner picked for Houston museums Festival of Films from Iran

The Runner picked for Houston museums Festival of Films from Iran
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) has picked Amir Naderis 1984 drama The Runner to screen at its 30th annual Festival of Films from Iran beginning Saturday.

A new-wave masterpiece of the post-revolution cinema, the film is often praised for having one of the best child performances of all time with Madjid Nirumand.

Inspired by Naderis own childhood, the film follows an illiterate, but resourceful, 11-year-old orphan (Nirumand), who lives alone in an abandoned tanker in the Iranian port city of Abadan. He survives by shining shoes, selling water and diving for deposit bottles thrown overboard by foreigners, while being bullied by adults and older kids. But he finds solace by dreaming about departing cargo ships and airplanes and by running, seemingly to nowhere.

Nirumands performance in The Runner was named #12 in a list of The 25 Greatest Child Performances in Cinema History on the film site Taste of Cinema. The Los Angeles Times called it the greatest performance ever given by a child.

The lineup for the MFAH Festival of Films from Iran also consists of five other films, including The Apple Day by Mahmud Ghaffari and Destiny by Yaser Talebi.

In the acclaimed drama The Apple Day, first-grader Mehdis father is an apple seller in Tehran. Mehdis school teacher asks each student to bring objects for each letter of the alphabet. Medhi is assigned to bring 30 apples to school, but when his fathers truck is stolen, the family is thrown into despair and circumstances require desperate measures. With almost documentary realism, the film magically transforms a particular story into one with universal symbolism.

The film won the Liv Ullmann Peace Prize for feature film at the 2022 Chicago International Childrens Film Festival.

Destiny follows 18-year-old Sahar who is left in charge of her poor, mentally challenged father in an isolated village in Iran after the death of her mother. Sahar dreams of attending university and becoming a doctor, but the extended family insists she plays the role of caregiver unless her father remarries. This warm and intimate observational documentary captures a young woman caught between traditional gender roles and her desire for self-determination, volleyball and Instagram.

The festival, which will be held at the Asia Society Texas Center and Rice Cinema, will run through January 29.

 

 

By TEHRAN TIMES
https://theiranproject.com/vdcjmtextuqeyxz.92fu.html
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