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A Companion to Motion Pictures and Public Value


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About Elly celebrates hope for heech in showing the proximity of life and death, certainty and indeterminacy, love and hatred, free will and determinism.

      Kiarostami’s last film, 24 Frames (2017) is the ultimate celebration of hope for heech. It consists of a painting and 23 frames of photos (taken by the director) that come to life through the art of animation. Most of the frames portray nature, birds, a herd of sheep, two lions, trees, snow, rain, and so forth. Nothing substantial happens in each frame. The key moment in each frame would be a bird flying away, or the sound of gunfire scaring away animals. The frames are fragmented as there is no grand narrative connecting the frames together. 24 Frames glamorizes nothingness on many different levels: narrative-wise, it is a non-narrative movie. From a cinematic perspective, it is not considered cinema, for it is a combination of photography, animation, and painting. With the exception of two frames, the main figures are animals (not humans), recalling the classical stories of One Thousand and One Nights and Kelileh and Denmeh (or Pancha Tantra) in which, animals become main characters. In terms of cinematography, it is minimalist and subtle. There is also no dialogue in the film. Nor is there a sense of time in the film. 24 Frames is a meditative and poetic film that celebrates the immediate moment by showing mundane moments of (natural) life. In fact, 24 Frames is a compilation of shorts, and the closest film to Akkas Bashi’s early short films that captured the moving pictures of some moments in people’s lives.

      In all of the films that were discussed in this section, hope for heech turns out to be emancipatory, both on the narrative level and for the spectators. In most of these films, there is no happy ending, sometimes no ending at all. The hope for nothing eventually ends in nothingness, opening a venue in the spectators’ minds to conclude their own narrative.

      The public aesthetic and artistic value of Iranian cinema is indebted to the intrinsic cultural values of Iranian culture, which in turn has been influenced by the cross-cultural and global aesthetic and artistic currents. The public artistic value of Iranian cinema as the dominant form of cultural expression made it a new pedestal for collective cultural activities among filmmakers and filmgoers. Iranian cinema outside of the political borders of the country has public value for the Persian, Baluchi, Urdu, Pashtun, Turkish, Turkmen, Arabic, Kurdish, and Lurish speaking communities in the Near and Middle East since it represents a shared cultural proximity in terms of linguistic, religious, and cultural ties.

      Notes

      1 1 The notion of cinema as cultural capital is extensively studied in Austin (2016).

      2 2 Nasser al-din shah was an ardent painter, poet, photographer and fiction writer.

      3 3 There are different accounts regarding the establishment of the first public cinema in Iran. Some sources indicated that missionaries opened the first cinema in Tabriz, others credited Alek Saginian as the founder of the cinema. What is consistent in both narratives is that Alek Saginian was actively involved in the administration of the cinema in Tabriz from the beginning until the end. To see the different accounts, refer to Omid (1996, p. 100); Armenians in Iranian Cinema (2004, p. 12); Naficy (2011, p. 27); and Yasamin Molana’s “History of Cinema in Tabriz” in mehrnews.com (published in 22 Shahrivar, 1393 Solar Hijri Calendar). https://www.mehrnews.com/news/2369174/آن-سوی-تاریخ-تا-این-روزهای-سینما-در-تبریز-سینما-سولی-خورشیدی.

      4 4 All the poems in this article are quoted from ganjoor.net (accessed October and November 2020).

      5 5 The notion of Heech has influenced modern Iranian art. Parviz Tanavoli is a sculptor and painter who is famous for his heech designs. He indicated that: “my nothingness (heech) was not tinged with the cynicism of Western artists. Mine was the nothingness of hope and friendship, a nothingness that did not seek to negate. In my mind, it was not life that amounted to nothing, but rather nothing which brimmed with life itself.” (quoted in Tanavoli’s website: https://www.tanavoli.com/about/themes/heech). Accessed October 4, 2020.

      6 6 I would like to thank Professors Hjort and Nannicelli for their invaluable comments. My son Mahan Navabi read and edited this article and shared his thoughts with me. I would like to extend my gratitude to my mentor, Professor Tavakoli-Targhi and my colleagues Professors Manijeh Mannani, Mahdi Tourage, and Asghar Seyed Ghorab who shared ideas and resources with me.

      References

      1 A’lam, Hushang. “Cypress,” Encyclopedia Iranica. Accessed Sept 20, 2020. https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/cypress-sarv-cupressus-tourn.

      2 Alizadeh, Hossein. 2013. « Love-stricken Showed Musical Instruments to Audiences.» (tarikhiran.ir, January 2013). Accessed October 15, 2020 «دلشدگان به روایت حسین علیزاده: علی حاتمی ساز را با سینما به مردم نشان داد» http://tarikhirani.ir/fa/ news/3901 /دلشدگان-به-روایت-حسین-علیزاده-علی -حاتمی-ساز-را-با-سینما-به-مردم-نشان-داد.

      3 Anonymous. 2011. One Thousand and One Nights. Tehran.

      4 Austin, Guy, ed. 2016. New Uses of Bourdieu in Film and Media Studies. Brooklyn, NY.

      5 Eagleton, Terry. 2015. Hope Without Optimism. New Haven, CT and London.

      6 Hayward, Susan. 2006. Cinema Studies: The Key Concepts. London and New York.

      7 Iran Cinéma Museum. 2004. Armenians in Iranian Cinema. Tehran.

      8 Khoshbakht, Ehsan. 2017. “Tehran noir: Samuel Khachikian and the rise and fall of Iranian genre films.” June 23, 2017. Accessed October 25, 2020. https://www2.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/sight-sound-magazine/features/tehran-noir-samuel-khachikian-iranian-genre-films.

      9 Mehrabi, Masud. 1985. The History of Iranian Cinema: From the Beginning to 1979. Tehran.

      10 Michon, Jean-Louis. 2006. “Sacred Music and Dance in Islam.” In Sufism, Love and Wisdom, edited by Jean-Louis Michon and Roger Gaetani, 153–79. Bloomington, IN.

      11 Mirabedini, Hassan. 2000. Hundred Years of Fiction Writing in Iran. Tehran.

      12 Naficy, Hamid. 2011. A Social History of Iranian Cinema, Volume 1: The Artisanal Era, 1897–1941. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

      13 Naficy, Hamid. 2012. A Social History of Iranian Cinema, Volume 3: The Islamicate Period, 1978–1984. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

      14 Omid, Jamal. 1996. The History of Iranian