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The Color of Paradise
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Directed by Majid Majidi.
Director Majid Majidi, whose Bacheha-Ye Aseman/Children Of Heaven was the first Iranian film to be nominated for an American Academy Award, returns with another compassionate story of children in need. Mohammad (Moshen Ramezani) is a student at a special school for blind children in Tehran; when summer break rolls around, Mohammad is the last student to be picked up by his family. His mother is dead, and his father (Hossein Mahjub), who earns a meagre wage working in a charcoal producing plant, sometimes considers abandoning the boy. However, father does eventually arrive, and Mohammad spends the summer with his sisters and grandmother at a farm surrounding by dazzling fields of wild flowers. The summer in the country is a joyous experience for Mohammad, until he discovers his father is giving thoughts to re-marrying, and considers his handicapped son to be a stumbling block in his future matrimonial plans. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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leeroy711leeroy711 Re: Recommended movies that you ...
by leeroy711 in Viewing with a purpose
hasn't rated it.
"Children of Heaven I did not think was that great, but the same director/writer made another film that I think is fantastic! It's called The Color of Paradise. Hopefully this will be a recommended movie that you love, love, love.[/quote] Quote from netflix:"If you wish to add this movie to your Queue, you must first remove some movies" " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Recommended movies that you ...
by Risselada in Viewing with a purpose
loved it.
"Children of Heaven I did not think was that great, but the same director/writer made another film that I think is fantastic! It's called The Color of Paradise. Hopefully this will be a recommended movie that you love, love, love. " [More]
paulpaul FilmCouch #44 - Spirituality an ...
by paul in FilmCouch
hasn't rated it.
"In this episode, Kevin and I invited listeners to share any experiences they considered to be spiritual while watching a movie. So, please feel free to share. I'll start by sharing a bit more detail around my experience with Children of Men. In the scene mentioned during the podcast where the warring soldiers stop firing on eachother when they hear the baby crying, I felt I had the most palpable experience of what Joseph Campbell called the "unknowable." It was a visceral moment of respect for life and the "force" behind it. The intangible idea that we're connected, that in saving another's life, I'm saving my own became real for me in that scene. Those are the best words I have. As usual, the "spiritual" stumps intellectual explanation, but I encourage you guys to give it a shot and share your experience here. -p " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Oscar-nominated Iranian director Majid Majidi (Children of Heaven) brings another compassionate tale of childhood innocence to the screen with this touching fable. Eight-year-old talent Moshen Ramezani evokes gut-wrenching sadness as well as adoring love and spiritual connection with life, nature, and God through his vulnerable performance as the blind Mohammed. The supporting cast is impressive: Hossein Mahjub as the boy's father is despondent, abrasive, and spiritually bereft yet not unsympathetic. Pain over his own abandonment and the repressed love for his son shine through. Salime Feizi is delightful as Mohammed's "beautiful Granny," convincing and moving as a joyous beacon of love in his life. The senses are used gracefully in Majidi's work: sound and touch are vital to Mohammed's sightless world, so the director captures the staccato drill of a woodpecker, outstretched hands "catching" the winds, and tangible "reading" of river rocks as a lyrical language in the imagination of a resourceful child. Although the protagonist is blind, Majidi doesn't shortchange the audience on the diverse visuals of Iranian life and its terrain: misty forests, glorious farmland, the urban streets of Tehran, and wool dyeing with the colors of wildflowers. The Color of Paradise (1999) is a feast of raw emotion, tactile imagery, and bravura filmmaking from a part of the world too long in the dark. ~ Lisa Kropiewnicki, All Movie Guide
 



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