Zahra
Bahrami - Baran
Mohammad Amir Naji - Memar
Hossein Abedini - Latif
Following up on his masterfully told
art house successes The Children of Heaven and The Color of Paradise,
Majid Majidi directs this quietly affecting tale about illegal Afghan
immigrants living and working in Iran. The film centers on Latif
(Hossein Abedini), a young Iranian man who buys provisions and makes
(awful) tea for the workers of a construction site. At the film's
outset, an Afghan worker named Najaf falls from the second story
and breaks his leg. A widower with five children to feed, Najaf
is in dire financial straits. He sends his teenaged son Rahmat to
the site under the care of family friend Solan. The teenager proves
to be a lousy worker but a whiz at making tea. After one mistake
too many, Memar -- the foreman -- has Latif hauling bags of plaster
and puts Rahmat on tea detail -- a task which the lad proves to
be quite a talent in. Rahmat also paints the kitchen, changes the
curtains, and makes other rather unusual changes to the normally
rough-and-tumble construction site. Soon everyone, save the resentful
Latif, is eating lunch at an actual table bedecked with a tablecloth.
Latif's anger and jealousy evaporates, however, once he makes a
surprising discovery. This film was screened at the 2001 Toronto
and AFI Film Festivals. |