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Aug 26, 2004

Marooned in Iraq

Most of the Iranian or Iraqi movies I have watched lately has a documentary quality, this one is no exception. It is a story of an old Kurdish folk singer crossing the border during Iran-Iraq war, to rescue the woman he has loved all his life. His two sons accompany him in the mission, although the last part of the journey he completes all by himself.

Bahman Ghobadi, the director of the movie has succeeded in bringing the aspects of Kurdish life that are unknown and scary to the rest of the world, the situations that Kurds face it daily. The homeland of Kurds, Kurdistan is spread across four countries, most of the times at war at each other. Every time there is a war, Kurds are the first casualty, most of them had spent the majority of life in mountain camps, the roar of fighter jets is their everyday radio, at one time chemical weapon strikes against the Kurds were so frequent that chemical scarring and deaths were common as flu and orphaned children comprise a large section of population. The film tries to touch all these aspects, weaving it in to the story. I'd say it is more of a documentary with some entertainment value. And with all these atrocities against Kurds, it comes as no surprise when Mr.Ghobadi says Kurds have more amateuer film makers per capita(even the cab drivers save up to buy 35 mm camera to make films!) than most other countries!

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