Samira Makhmalbaf’s Blackboards is about itinerant teachers, carrying blackboards on their backs, who wander a remote, desolate part of Kurdish Iran, in search of students. Like many recent Iranian films, Blackboards is shot in a verite style, with handheld camera and nonprofessional actors, and an emphasis on particular situations rather than a well-rounded plot. I love this style/genre, but its repetition from film to film, and director to director, can become tedious after a while. However, the 23-year-old Makhmalbaf comes up with a very unique and distinctive film, different from anything else I’ve seen…
Samira Makhmalbaf’s Blackboards is about itinerant teachers, carrying blackboards on their backs, who wander a remote, desolate part of Kurdish Iran, in search of students. Like many recent Iranian films, Blackboards is shot in a verite style, with handheld camera and nonprofessional actors, and an emphasis on particular situations rather than a well-rounded plot. I love this style/genre, but its repetition from film to film, and director to director, can become tedious after a while. However, the 23-year-old Makhmalbaf comes up with a very unique and distinctive film, different from anything else I’ve seen…
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