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Ankara 2007Women under Pressure
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"A Few Days Later" by Niki Karimi |
The graphic designer Shahrzad, protagonist of A Few Days Later (Chand Rooz Ba'd...), has a pretty big problem: Her fiancé's ex-wife returned to his house to stay with him. Despite her fiancé's assertions that he has no relationship whatsoever with his ex, Shahrzad — played by the film's director and co-writer Niki Karimi — experiences this situation as a sorrowful and blind one. Karimi's direction conveys the impossibility of leading a daily life freely as a woman in Iran, glimpsing violent male behavior even in traffic. Even the act of Shahrzad smoking on the street is an unacceptable behavior in this masculine world. The main topic of her conversations with her female friends is the determining role of the man in the relationships between men and women. Unfortunately, this fact isn't likely to change a few days later either.
Kaori Momoi's FIPRESCI award-winning film Faces of a Fig Tree (Ichijiku No Kao) tells the story of a housewife and the fig tree that witnesses the changes in her life. In the first half of the film, the life of the housewife, who lives with her spouse and three children in a house whose garden has a fig tree, is derailed by her husband's death. After struggling for a while during this period, the woman marries another man and keeps on living as she used to. Although it observes the events of its protagonist's life in a traditional and familiar way — much as the fig tree she moves from her old home to her new house seems to stand dispassionate watch over her — the film has a structurally innovative and creative language. If this suggests a narrative cul-de-sac, Momoi does not convey this with a sorrowful language as other directors might.
On the contrary, the film reveals its story through the metaphor of a woman's ability to live her life like a fig tree — enduring no matter where she's planted, and no matter what the conditions are — with an innovative and eccentric approach. Though Faces of a Fig Tree seems different from the other films with its structurally creative language, all four films work to tell the same story — of women confronted with hardships as they struggle to change her life and free themselves from entanglements, squeezed up in between locations and lifestyles they did not make for themselves.
Necla Algan is a Turkish film critic writing for "Yeni Sinema", "Empire" and "Evrensel". She also is the co-writer of the film "Fikret Beg".
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Ankara 2007
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