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|
.
A
Brief Critical History of Iranian Feature Film (1896-1975)
By: Reza Talachian *
The Advent of Cinema in Iran...
Iran throughout its history has been a melting pot for other
cultures. Repeated introductions of new cultures through conquerors and
traders from Aryan civilization until today have developed a kind of
social subconscious filtration system which absorbs only the useful
aspects of the frequently imposed, ever newer external cultures. This
factor made it easier for Iran to adopt the western-originated cinema,
in spite of Moslem religious beliefs that opposed it. Yet, although
superficially adaptable, deep down a majority of Iranians remain
Persian, i.e. self-reliant individualists.
Before the advent of cinema in Iran, entertainment was a luxury afforded
by only a small, well-to-do segment of the population while the great
majority of the people had no money to spare. Morteza Ravadi, Iranian
historian expresses this point very well:
"Class
differences, lack of social and economic security and feudalistic wars
(in the country) had the life of the people and particularly that of
the great majority of the working classes so chaotic and unsure that
people wished only for security and equal justice, to be able to make
even a substandard living and continue their unbearable lives.
Obviously, under such circumstances entertainment and recreation were
of secondary importance...and the rich entertained themselves with
drinking, love making with pretty girls and handsome boys, gambling,
hunting, horseback riding, polo playing, music and singing, attending
ceremonial chess and backgammon parties, watching the performances of
clowns and comedians, attending dancing and singing parties, and
listening to entertaining stories."[1]
In the West,
cinema complemented the existing popular forms of entertainment such as
theaters, traveling musical shows and the various kinds of stage
productions. But in Iran, cinema virtually replaced most forms of mass
entertainment for various political, economical, historical and cultural
reasons. When cinema came to Iran it was a diversion for the well-to-do
for about ten years or so before it turned into a mass entertainment
medium. Since 1905, when the first movie theater opened in Tehran, the
Iranian government has made a special point of keeping ticket prices low
so that all segments of the population, at any economic level, might
have access to this source of recreation. The early history of film
making in Iran is far from clear because of a lack of easily accessible
data, death of the early motion pictures pioneers and loss of almost all
the early footage.
It is claimed that the first film made in Iran was of the coronation of
Muzaffar al-Din Shah in 1896 photographed by Rusi Khan. However there is
no evidence to substantiate the claim. But it is certain that Shah
during his visit to Paris in 1900 saw moving pictures, liked them,
ordered his official photographer to purchase motion picture equipment.
Thus cinema became a diversion for royal court and well-to-do section of
the society when it came to Iran (1900).
The early film making in Iran was often supported by the royalty of the
time who were interested only in the entertainment value of the medium.
Therefore, most of films of this period are news reels of activities,
such as various royal and religious ceremonies which were mostly
screened in the royal palace. One could see these newsreels at the homes
of dignitaries during weddings, circumcision celebrations and birth
ceremonies.
The first pioneer of this film era is Mirza Ebrahim Khan Akasbashi who
was the official photographer in the court of Muzzafar-e Din Shah, the
fifth Shah of the Qajar dynasty. The second, Mandy Russi Khan, who
originally was from Russia, filmed Moharram mourning ceremonies
(processed in Russia and not shown in Iran) and Muzzafared-Din Shah's
coronation ceremonies.[2]
By 1900, Ebrahim Khan Sahafbashi a nationalistic antique dealer, on the
way back from Europe bought an Edison Kinetoscope film projector and a
number of films. He converted the backyard of his antique shop into an
open air movie house; the first movie theater in Iran came into being in
1905. The customers were mostly members of upper class families or
royalty.
Khan Baba Motazedi, an Iranian electromechanical engineering student,
brought home from Paris a 35 mm Gaumont camera, some raw stock, film
processing chemicals and projector. At first he experimented with
production of 'entertainment films' for private viewing featuring his
family members and friends. Later, by order of the Minister of War, he
became involved in filming the various ceremonies at the court of Reza
Shah, the father of the last Shah of Iran.
1906 in Iran was the year of constitutional revolution, but the
establishment of parliamentary democracy did not take place until 1911.
Nonetheless the era of democracy did not last long. In 1921, the British
government by supporting Reza Khan (later he called himself Reza Shah
and established the Pahlavi dynasty) and staging a coup d'etat,
overthrew Ahmad Shah, the last member of Qajar dynasty.
Considering that Reza Shah was one of the more progressive monarchs in
the recent history of Iran, and since he was fascinated by the means of
modernization, it is odd that he could not conceive the role and the
importance of the motion picture industry in society. While he
patronized the arts, revived ancient arts and crafts, preserving them
from extinction, and even encouraged the modern arts, his efforts toward
cinema were very small. Besides a few documentary films which were made
to record the royal ceremonies and a few newsreels of the events, the
rest of the film which were exhibited in theaters were imported from
Europe, the United States, and Russia.
The first feature length movie, ABI AND RABI was not made until 1930,
when Ovans Ohanian, a young Iranian-American, emigrated back to Iran
from Russia where he had spent most of his life and had studied cinema
at The Cinema Academy of Moscow. From the very beginning he realized
that making movies without a professional cast and crew is something
next to impossible. He established a foundation for a film
industry—-an acting school to train actors and actresses to be used in
films. Since the general attitude of the people was that cinema could
not develop into an art form and/or a profession, Parvareshghahe
Artistiye Cinema (The Cinema Artist Education center) attracted only
sixteen students and two instructors, Ohanian and Sa'id Nafici.
Ohanian, with the help of Motazedi as cinematographer; Sako Elidzeh,
producer; two of his students, Zarrabi and Sohrabi as leading actors,
wrote and directed the first Persian silent feature movie. ABI AND RABI,
a 35 mm, black and white, comedy is the story of the adventures of two
men, one tall and one short, and based on a Danish comedy series. It was
shown in 1930 in Cinema Mayak, where it was well received. However, no
copy of this film is known to exist.
The success of this film at the box office encouraged Ohanian and his
crew to produce another comedy entitled HAJI AGHA (1932, the story of a
religious man's daughter and her fiance who want to act in a film.
If Ohanian's contribution to Iranian cinema has been considered great,
the trend he left behind was not harmless. Imitation of foreign films of
mostly comedy and melodrama genres and almost total displacement of any
realism in later films were the results of his early influence. At the
time Iran was in an awakening stage, when the society was in desperate
need of social consciousness and a modern understanding of life, and at
a time when the formation of its modern economy was taking place.
Entertainment in general and entertainment and escapist film in
particular was the last thing that Iran needed at that time for
progressive social growth. Spending hours in a movie theater and
watching nonsense melodrama, Hollywood-Style and accomplishing nothing,
was a luxury that Iranians could not afford.
A student of The Cinema Artist Educational Center in Tehran, Ebrahim
Moradi, a 'born and bred' Iranian, began the second feature film. But a
series of obstacles, including lack of adequate technical equipment and
trained motion picture personnel, government restrictions on importation
of cinema equipment, and lack of proper production funds prevented the
film from reaching completion. The unfinished THE BROTHER'S REVENGE
(1932), a black and white, 35 mm, silent, forty-five minutes in length
was written, directed, and photographed by Moradi himself. This
unsatisfactory experience motivated Moradi to establish the third
Iranian film studio, Iran Film Company, Limited. The first production of
this studio was SENSUAL (1934), a critical comparison between the
pitfalls of city dwelling and the simple and unspoiled way of life in
the village—a comparison of the change in social values in the cities
because of westernization of Iran with the traditional way of life in
the villages. From about 1925, the challenge of modernization of the big
city against the simplicity and purity of the traditional way of life in
Iranian society became a theme upon which to build stories that were
popular with cinema-goers and safe from governmental censorship.
The first Iranian "talkie" entitled THE LOR GIRL was released
(1933) in two Tehran cinemas, Mayak and Sepah. The story of the film was
based on a comparison between the state of security in Iran at the end
of the Qajar dynasty and during Reza Shah's period. The star and script
writer was a poet and a writer, Abdulhossein Sepanta who has been
acknowledged as the father of Iranian sound movies.[3]
This was a period of mostly newsreels. Some of the subjects were the
arrival of Reza Shah at the National Constituent Assembly (December 15,
1925), horse races, and Army parades. Also, opening ceremonies of the
trans-Iranian railway system, the Pahlavi communication center, the Bank
Melli Iran (National Bank of Iran), and the opening of the installations
of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company in Khuzestan were typical topics. All
of these newsreels were shot, processed and printed by Khan Baba
Motazedi. Some of these newsreels were shown at the Royal Court but most
were shown in the army compounds as well as in the theaters.
There were fifteen theaters at this time and all were located in the
northern avenues of Tehran, Iran's capital, where most of their
customers were upper class people. Later, with financial aid from the
government and with the supervision of Motazedi, the first movie theater
was built in the southern part of Tehran where the poor lived. It is
called Tammadon and is still operating.[4]
Following Reza Shah's coronation in 1926, the most controversial period
of the contemporary history in Iran began. Those with a leftist point of
view, as well as those with a religious point of view were antagonistic
to Reza Shah's regime. Those with a more 'moderate' view criticized lack
of freedoms, yet they applaud Reza Shah's modernization of Iran.
Overall social and political conditions at this period militated against
the growth of the motion picture industry and audience size. For years,
the Moslem clergy prejudiced the vast majority of people against
anything new. There was social pressure against the showing of films and
the establishment of movie theaters. Women were not allowed to go to
movie theaters (later one theater created by Ali Vakili in the
Zoroastrian school hall in Tehran was devoted to showing films to women
only).
The shooting of THE LOR GIRL started in April 1932, took seven months to
complete, in a place called Ghamoor on the outskirts of the city of
Bombay, India. The financial success of the film encouraged The Imperial
Film Company of Bombay and Sepanta to produce other Iranian films, in
India, such as, FERDOWSI (1935), the story of life of the most
celebrated epic poet of Iran; SHIRIN AND FARHAD (1935), an Iranian
classic love story which is believed to be partly true, takes place
during the reign of the Sassanian king, Khosrow I, known as Anushirvan,
"The Just" (531-579); BLACK EYES (1935), the story of Nader
Shah's invasion of India in 1737, and the effects of the invasion on the
relationship of two lovers; and LAILI AND MAJNUN (1937), an eastern love
story similar to western story of ROMEO AND JULIET. Upon the completion
of the last film, Sepanta returned to Iran, hoping to continue his
film-making activities in his home country. But various obstructions and
lack of financial support by the government or the private sector,
forced him to part with cinema. He started the Sepanta newspaper in 1943
in Esfahan (a central city of Iran), and by the mid-1950's he became the
Iranian assistant of the United States Aid program in Esfahan.
Throughout his life (1907 Tehran-1969 Esfahan) he wrote or translated
eighteen books and made five Iranian feature films which for many years
will be remembered because of their themes, quality, and technique. With
Sepanta's departure from cinema, the production of Iranian sound movies
in India came to an end and no feature films were made in Iran until
1947, when the new Iranian film industry was founded by Esmail Kushan.
Kushan was hardly a sincere artist, but rather seemed more interested in
the commercial exploitation of cinema.
Experimentation and New Film Industry (1938-1965)
As World War Two ended, the film industry in Iran took a new form. A
group of new film-makers experimented with news reels and documentaries
and the Iranian and United States governments as well as other
organizations in Iran sponsored their efforts. Also, a number of
technicians, cinema enthusiasts, and financiers found dubbing of foreign
films into Persian (Farsi) an easy and profitable job. The private
sector which came to existence after occupation of Iran by the armies of
the three big powers (USA, USSR, and England). As American troops
entered Iran in October 1941, they used the cross-country railway as
well as main roads to send military hardware to Russia—-"The
Bridge of Victory". This act, beside many undesirable side-effects
for Iranians, created many new jobs, improving the economic condition of
a certain segment of the population. As a result, new entertainment
centers were opened, and cinemas became more popular. And since dubbing
foreign films into Farsi was increasing the number of cinema-goers, all
indications were that producing films in the Iranian language (Farsi)
would be a successful business to undertake.
From 1937 till 1947 because of the world economic conditions and then
the involvement in World War Two, the motion picture industry in Iran
did not produce a single film, but the flow of foreign film to Iran did
not stop. In 1947, Esmail Kushan, a young Iranian who had received film
training in Germany at Universum Film Aktienge-Sellschafe (UFA) returned
to Iran. While in Turkey, he had dubbed two foreign films into Farsi,
ARCHIN MAL ALAN, a Russian film and THE FIRST RENDEZVOUS, a French film.
With the help of some of his colleagues, he established Mitra Films
(1947), the first real film company in Tehran, Iran. Through their
persistence, local feature film production was born and survived.
The first Mitra Film company production was TUMULTUOUS LIFE (1948), a
black and white, 35 mm film which is a critical drama about the pitfalls
of arranged marriages, a common practice in Iran. The film was released
in Tehran in April 1948, but because it did not have the glamor of
Hollywood films the audience was use to, it did poorly at the box
office.
Despite the box office failure of the film, Kushan insisted that the
company produce another film. Finally he managed to convince his
associates to produce his second film, THE PRISONER OF THE PRINCE
(1948), a story adopted from "A Thousand and One Nights"
folk-tales. This film also did not bring an immediate financial success
and Mitra Film closed down. But Kushan continued his efforts and
established a new production company in 1949, Pars Film Studio, which
developed into the most active studio in Iran, producing cheap formula
feature films for the local market. Kushan has been named "the
father of the Iranian film industry" by Georges Sadoul.[5]
|
Independently
produced feature films versus
studio-sponsored feature films 1948-1965[7]
|
|
Year
|
Studio
Productions
|
Independent
Productions
|
|
1948
|
2
|
0
|
|
1949
|
1
|
0
|
|
1950
|
2
|
1
|
|
1951
|
6
|
1
|
|
1952
|
9
|
0
|
|
1953
|
18
|
1
|
|
1954
|
15
|
1
|
|
1955
|
14
|
0
|
|
1956
|
18
|
0
|
|
1957
|
7
|
3
|
|
1958
|
17
|
2
|
|
1959
|
20
|
2
|
|
1960
|
23
|
4
|
|
1961
|
23
|
6
|
|
1962
|
22
|
4
|
|
1963
|
24
|
6
|
|
1964
|
22
|
10
|
|
1965
|
26
|
17
|
|
|
After Kushan's
Pars Film Studio, many film production companies were formed, and many
films produced. The great majority of these films were modeled on silent
film genres, melodramas, situation comedies and adventure films. If
film-makers produced higher quality films they were blocked from
distribution for two reasons, the low expectation and escapist needs of
a relatively unsophisticated audience and strict censorship.
The first attempt to challenge the Iranian film industry to produce
higher quality films which reflected the social conditions of the time,
was in 1958 by Farrokh Gafary, a French-educated film-maker, who studied
cinema at Cinematheque Francaise. His first film was SOUTH OF THE TOWN
(1958), a take-off of Vittoria Desica's UMBERTO D (1952), but a purely
Persian expression of neorealism concerning the poverty-stricken life of
the southern district of Tehran. It is a description of the
psychological values of the pop culture in its sociological setting.
Gafary's intention was to make a kind of "film d'sutre" film
with a social comment on the poor district of Tehran. The film was not
successful even in poor sections of the country, because the movie-goers
were accustomed to seeing movies as a means of entertainment or escape
from reality vs. social comment. Subsequently, Gafary made a crime
drama, THE NIGHT OF THE HUNCHBACK (1964). At the same time another
pioneering Iranian writer-cum-film-maker, Ebrahim Golestan, made ADOBE
AND MIRROR (1963), a dramatic film. Both films were met with public
apathy and were subjected to censorship.
During the (1938-1965) period, the Iranian film industry's main
productions were purely entertaining or escapist. Also at this time, the
film and television markets were monopolized through an explosion of
investment by foreign countries, particularly the United States. Erik
Barnouw's comment in The Image Empire expresses this point to some
extent:
Some of the companies marketing television films also sold receivers and
transmitters; some sold consultant services, some invested in foreign
stations, production companies, dubbing services, animation studios,
theaters.[6]
Bubbing and Importation of
Foreign Films
The dubbing of foreign films into Farsi was to some extent a catalyst
raising the technical and artistic quality of film production in Iran
and, consequently, the expectations of the Iranian audience. These
improvements were accomplished through years of experimentation with
different sound systems such as the interlocks, and raw stock such as 17˝
mm tape magnetic sound stripe on 35 mm composite print. Magnetic sound
stripe became the standard procedure in Iran's dubbing industry (except
for the films with sterophonic sound which were dubbed with a new
optical track) with almost perfect lip synchronization. However by the
late 1960's some major movie theaters, to satisfy a small number of
Iranians and foreigners, were showing films with their original language
sound track one night a week.
As early as 1943, a number of technicians and financiers established the
first dubbing studio in Tehran, called Iran-No Film. The studio's first
dubbed film (1945) was JEN VA PARI (THE GENI AND THE ANGEL). At first
the company experienced various technical and managerial difficulties,
but by 1947 the studio was reorganized as a production studio as well as
a dubbing studio. Meanwhile a group of Iranians in Europe after the war
realized that European "B" pictures could be bought and dubbed
inexpensively with the technical facilities available in Europe, and
would be able to compete with Hollywood films in the Iranian market. The
first such effort was DOKHTARE FARARI (ESCAPING GIRL), a French
production and DOKHTARE KOWLI (GYPSY GIRL), a Spanish film. Both were
dubbed in Turkey by Esmail Kushan. And both films were exhibited in Iran
in 1946 with excellent box office success. DOKHTARE FARARI earned twenty
millians rials ($625,000). DOKHTARE KOWLI earned fifteen millions rials
($468,750). Tickets prices in the first class cinemas ranged between
fifteen, twelve, and eight rials. At that time, thirty-two rials were
equal to one U.S. dollar; now, seventy rials is equal to one U.S.
dollar. The financial success of these two films encouraged many
Iranians in Europe and in Iran to become more involved in dubbing
activities. This led to the establishment of dubbing studios in Tehran.
Some of these studios later expanded into film production studios.
Dubbing is a more popular form of transliteration or translation, for
example, subtitles, which require split concentration. The market that
gave rise to the dubbing studios was the mass audience of entertainment
and escapist films. Modern dubbing of foreign films into Farsi has
emerged from a tradition that encountered and overcame both technical
and cultural barriers. After years of experimentation with various raw
stocks and machinery the dubbing studios came up with a unique
procedure. They cut the part with optical sound from the film and glued
a new 35 mm optical track in Farsi over the original soundtrack of the
composite print. The Aryana Studio in 1950 was the first studio which
dubbed an American film, THE SONG OF SCHEHEREZADE using this system.
After continued screenings, however, the added soundtrack began to
separate from the visuals and this method was replaced by a more
permanent, the binding of magnetic tape onto the composite print,
keeping half of the optical track uncovered, (Since part of the optical
soundtrack was not covered with magnetic sound stripe the films could
also be exhibited in their original language.) This system of magnetic
sound stripe, recording mixed Farsi soundtrack on a striped portion of
optical track, became the standard procedure in Iran's dubbing industry.
Besides the technical problems which the studios had to overcome in
order to dub a foreign film into Farsi, there were cultural and
political barriers. Often, the whole concept of the film was changed in
fear of censorship, or because of cultural taste. For example, Jerry
Lewis's song in the Cops Cafe in the movie PATSY, was replaced with an
Indian song because Iranians were much more receptive to Indian music,
culturally closer to their own, than American nightclub music. And much
of John Wayne's dialogue was changed to the Iranian vernacular,
concerning the heroic and the macho. As time went by, dubbers learned to
almost flawlessly imitate any foreign actor in Farsi. The translators
learned that the originality of the films had to be preserved and that
finding Farsi words to achieve a very close lip synchronization was
crucial. Obviously the studios with excellent dubbing facilities
produced better soundtracks, and the general quality of dubbed films
improved. However dubbing foreign films into Farsi in Europe ended by
1961, and almost all the foreign films are now dubbed in Tehran, Iran.
"Dubbing of
foreign films into the Farsi language in Tehran has improved to such
an extent that the films distributors have discontinued having their
films dubbed in Italy, as was the practice in previous years. The
reasons for this are lower costs in Tehran and a large variety of
local voices."[8]
|
Number
of Motion Picture Films
imported into Iran, 1928-1930
|
|
Country
of Origin
|
1928
|
1929
|
1930
|
|
United
States
|
133
|
227
|
145
|
|
France
|
100
|
110
|
94
|
|
Germany
|
30
|
47
|
60
|
|
Russia
|
32
|
57
|
42
|
|
Other
Countries
|
10
|
19
|
9
|
|
Total
|
305
|
460
|
347
|
|
|
Before 1930, the
main sources of feature films which were shown in Iranian cinemas were
generally silent movies, and imported from the United States, France,
Germany, Russia, and other European countries. However American film
dominated the Persian market and kept their number-one place throughout
the period of this study. Talkies came to Iran only a few years after
their invention in the West, i.e. by the end of 1930. After 1930,
importation of all films to Iran started to decline because of the
general world economic situation (which lasted until the outbreak of
World War Two), and governmental restriction on the sale of foreign
money in Iran.
"Film
importers, in common with all others dealing in so-called luxury
goods, were faced with the greatest difficulty not only in obtaining a
permit to purchase exchange but in finding the exchange itself, so
that few orders could be placed abroad. In consequence, what appeared
to be a promising field for exploitation at the beginning of the year
(1930) left acutely the effect of the current economic crisis..."
"Nevertheless, in spite of the lack of new films, interest in the
cinema on the part of Persians did not wane, and a attendance
throughout the country increased steadily."[9]
If this situation
created difficulties in importing new films at that time, it encouraged
a number of Iranians to start producing feature films locally between
1929-1937, despite the inadequate technical facilities and adverse
social conditions. However, the number of Iranian films produced during
this period was not large enough to make any significant difference in
the importation of foreign films. And at this time cinema owners were
forced to look outside the country in order to fill up their programs.
Between 1930-1940 as the American films retained its popularity, German
and Russian films surpassed the French films because they were easier to
obtain.
"Between
March 22, 1940 and March 21, 1941, approximately 60 percent of the
films shown (in Iran) were from the United States, 18 percent from
Germany, 12 percent from the Soviet Union, and 5 percent from
France."[10]
From 1945 to 1950
European productions, such as French, German, Italian, and British
films, reappeared in the Iranian market, as American movies continued
their predominance in spite of their higher cost.
"Between
August 15 and November 1, 1948, the commission of theatres granted 93
new permits for showing full-length films. Of this total 63 were
United States productions, 13 Russian, 4 French, 4 Indian, 3 British,
2 Egyptian, 22 German, and 1 Italian. One was produced in
Iran."[11]
In spite of the
development and growth of the local film industry during the 1950's and
1960's, foreign films continued to hold the market. After the American
films, the Italian and Indian films replaced German and French films.
Italian and Indian films were less expensive to get hold of, also they
were easier to dub because of similar cultural values which allowed for
more of the original soundtrack to remain. Russian films lost the
popularity they had during the war years.
"In
1946-1965, 523 reels of feature films produced abroad were imported by
Iran. The biggest film exporter to Iran was the United States,
followed by Italy, India, Britain and the Soviet Union. On an average,
about 2,000 million rials ($28,571,430) in foreign exchange is spent
each year on the import of foreign films. Foreign film imports
continue to increase, keeping pace with the growth in the number of
new cinema houses and cinema-goers."[12]
From the first
showing of American movies at the Grand Cinema in Tehran (1925), until
the end of this study (1974), the United States has been the biggest
exporter of feature films to Iran, and not without influence. The film
language established and elaborated in Hollywood has become a standard
of expectation in Iran. Most of the films imported from elsewhere are
usually attempts to copy the Hollywood style and as a result suffer from
their status as bastard sons. Some appeals of American film have been
the general technical superiority and the simplicity of content. Also,
the scale and grandeur of such films as EL CID and DOCTOR ZHIVAGO have
drawn large crowds in Iran. So the Persian attraction for things
glorious and luxurious is re-enforced by Hollywood.
Iranian
National Film Industry Takes Shape (1966-1976)
In the decade of 1966-1976 of film-making in Iran, various factors
provided the production of a large number of feature, documentary, and
animated films as well the entrance of many young film-makers into the
arena of film-making with fresh, new perceptions and approaches. Some of
these factors are the establishment of film schools; National Iranian
Television (NIT) in 1969, National Iranian Radio and Television (NIRT)
1972; numerous film festivals; film clubs, such as Kanun Film, Farabi
Film Club, the Cinematheque of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Arts
and various film clubs at the universities; film production companies
with government assistance, such as Tel Film, Film Industry Development
Company of Iran (FIDCI), and the New Film Group; the emergence of
foreign trained Iranian film-makers as a collective force which
abandoned the traditional film formula, characters and situations; and a
new generation of socially conscious writers.
The school of Television and Cinema was established in Tehran in 1969.
It was fully financed and supported by the government of Iran through
the NIRT (National Iranian Radio and Television). After passing the
entrance exam, the students went through a technical training period of
two years along with their regular courses of study which related one
way or another to film-making. All expenses were paid by the government.
Included were the use of film equipment, raw stock, processing,
animation materials, and the student's housing and board costs, plus a
stipend of about $300 a month. In return, students were required to work
for the government after their graduation for a period of five years as
a camera-person, soundperson etc., usually at NIRT in Tehran or its
branches in the other cities.
The government established this school to train technicians for the
expansion of NIRT. Later, a graduate school was added, The Graduate
School of Television and Cinema. Any Bachelors degree was accepted,
which meant that the Associate degree undergraduates of The School of
Television and Cinema could not be considered for the program. Graduate
students of Television and Cinema did not go through the same technical
training the undergraduates did. Their curriculum dealt more with theory
than practice. After graduation they were employed in government offices
and institutions as audio-visual experts and programmers. Most were
absorbed by the programming section of NIRT or the Ministry of Education
of Iran. These students were treated better financially by the
government than the undergraduates both during and after graduation.
Most graduate students were married and the number of women was as large
as the men, while the undergraduate school was composed of 95% men.
During 1977-1979 (a period in which I taught animation and made a few
films there), the Fough-e Diplom (Junior College Section) had 370
students and about 50 teachers, and the Fough-e Lisance (Graduate
Section) had 130 students, 10 full-time and 15 part-time teachers. Both
sections of the school were located in Tehran (Vozara Ave. and Pahlavi
Ave., respectively) about a mile apart and five miles from NIRT. Both
sections of the school cooperated with each other but were run
independently under the supervision of the NIRT. The undergraduate
section was furnished with thirteen Steenbecks, twelve Eclair movie
cameras, tape recorders and other equipment, along with photography and
graphic departments. All lab work including processing, printing, and
special effects were done free of charge by the huge NIRT lab.
Computerized Oxberry animation stands were also freely available. All
films as a result were expected to meet government approval. Film rights
went to the government of Iran but the students could have their
personal print, again, free of charge. Despite the foundation of the
NIRT primarily as an instrument of propaganda, functioning to justify
government actions through direct propaganda on one hand, and occupying
the peoples' minds with nonsense entertainment on the other, it had a
noticeable impact on the Iranian film industry. In trying to reach the
educated beyond the cinema's normal mass audience, NIRT brought in some
exceptional programming such as Bergman films, THE ASCENT OF MAN, and
the like. By doing this, they inadvertently raised the expectations of
the general public which began demanding quality television and quality
film. Television also made inroads despite the Moslem opposition to
visual media thereby enlarging the film audience as well. And it
functioned as a training ground for film-makers and technicians who
later worked in the commercial field. Finally, television functioned as
a secondary financial source for cinema by showing Iranian films after
they ran in the theaters. Overall, the impact of Iranian television has
been to raise audience appreciation and to secondarily support the film
industry and must be considered an important factor in the development
of film-making in Iran after 1960's.
The Tehran International Film Festival (1972) was organized to promote
the art of Cinema that expressed humanitarian values and promoted
understanding and exchange of ideas between nations. By its third year
the festival drew 177 films from 54 countries. The juries were chosen
from notable film-makers from Russia, Britain, America, Italy, Poland,
Iran, France, India, Brazil, Hungary, and the United Arab Emirates. Also
the International Festival of Films of Children and Young Adults was
established in 1966 in Tehran to recognize and support films for
children under 14. Films dealing with developmental and cross-cultural
themes were sought. In its first year twenty-five countries sent in 111
films. Similar was the Education Film Festival (1963) which awarded
prizes in three categories: scientific, personal growth, and
development, and general knowledge. The main purpose for establishing
the Sepass Film Festival (1969) was to honor and encourage the Iranian
motion picture industry. In this respect it is similar to the Academy
Awards in the United States, however, aside from feature length films,
prizes have also been awarded to short films of 8, 16, and 35 mm. And
finally, the amateur film field was covered by a major festival
established in 1970, the Cinema-ye Azad of Iran Festival (1970). It was
organized by the Cinema-ye Azad (Free Cinema of Iran) and the
International Festival of Super 8. Judging of competition films is done
in collaboration with The School of Television and Cinema. This festival
functioned to promote amateur film-making of humanistic and artistic
values and encourage understanding and friendship between Iranian
amateur film-makers and those of other nationalities.
There was an emergence of a new generation of socially conscious
writers, such as Gholam Hossein Saedi (the author of The Mina Cycle. The
Cow, and many other stories of the life of underprivileged Iranians),
Sadegh Chuback, Mohud Dolat Abadi, and Hushang Golshiri, etc, who
cooperated with the young film-makers in the development of stories and
scripts. These progressive and politically active Iranian writers, were
typically anti-government, nationalistic and seekers of social justice.
Their lives and their writing displayed a passion for their fellow human
beings, especially the oppressed. Most of them had modern educations as
well as a more traditional understanding of life. Their writing is
powerful, rich in content, and communicable to all people. Most of them,
if not all, have been arrested and sometimes tortured by order of the
last Shah of Iran (Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi). In the last 80 years
poets, painters, musicians, film-makers, intellectuals, educators,
writers---any segment of the society which did not function in the
direction of the established system, was the object to rejection and
destruction. For this segment of Iranian society it was a matter of
choice--"to stand dying or to die standing." A careful
opposition developed that is discernible in the various media, including
film.
These interrelated factors created a mood for some of the most
celebrated Persian film-makers to produce movies such as SIAVASH IN
PERSEPOLIS (1965), by Rahnema, AHOO'S HUSBAND (1966), by Davood Molapour,
GHEYSAR (1966), by Massoud Kimai, THE COW (1968), by Daryoush Mehrjuie,
DOWNPOUR (1970), by Bahrain Beizaie, THE POSTMAN (1970), by Mehrjuie,
THE SPRING (1970), by Arbi Avanesian, TRANQUILITY IN THE PRESENCE OF
OTHERS (1971), by Nasser Taghvaie, BITA (1972), by Hajir Daryoush,
SADEGH THE KURD (1972), by Taghvaie, TANGSIR (1973), by Amir Taheri,
STILL LIFE (1974), by Sohrab Shahid Saless, THE MINA CYCLE (1974), by
Mehrjuie, PRINCE EHTEJAB (1974), by Bahman Farmanara, THE STRANGER AND
FOG (1974), by Beizaie, THE CROW (1976), by Bahram Beizaie, and THE
REPORT (1976), by Abbas Kiarostami.
But these Iranian films represented only a small fraction of the 480
feature films that were made in Iran between 1966 and 1973. Sixty-two
percent were categorized as drama or melodrama, 19.3 percent as
comedies, and 12.3 percent as crime and adventure films. Mostly, they
were inexpensive and low quality song and dance, or sex and violence,
melodramas.
Despite a crisis of creativity, competition from foreign films,
government competition with the private sector, strict censorship, and
rampant inflation, all of which led to a sharp decline in both the
quality and the quantity of films being produced, the Iranian cinema
made immense technical and aesthetic progress in this period. Since the
new historical era with its rise of social, economic and political
consciousness, intellectuals have been getting involved in the making of
films.
"The
Persians have been ever the artists of the Near East, and world music,
painting and architecture all have been enriched by Persian
contributions."[13]
There is promise
that Iran will now contribute an even greater share to the expressive
arts in the main stream of civilization.
Thus what was introduced in Iran three quarters of a century ago (1900)
as a diversion for the rich elite, has become the most important means
of mass entertainment in that country.(1975)
* Credits for this essay goes to:
<http://www.iranchamber.com/cinema/articles/critical_history_iranian_film.php>
Endnotes:
-
Morteza
Ravandi, Tarikh Ejtemaie Iran (Social History of Iran), Vol. 3,
quoted in Hamid Sho'aie, Sedaye Pa (Footstep) (Tehran: Gilan Press,
1352 (1973)), p. 7.
-
Farrokh
Gaffary, Le Cinema en. (Tehran: Le Conseil de la Culture et des
Arts, Centre d'etude et de la Coordination Culturelles, Novembre,
1973), p. 4.
-
Hamid Sho'aie,
Natn Avaran Cinema. No. 1, Abdul Hossein Sepanta. (Tehran:
Chapkhaneh Sherkat Herminco, 2535 (1976)), p. 13-14.
-
Ibid.
-
Georges Sadoul,
Histoire du Cinema Mondial des Origines a Nous Jours (Paris:
Flammarion, 1949), p. 485.
-
Erik Barnouw,
History of Broadcasting. Volume 3: The Image Empire. (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1970), p. 111.
-
Ali M. Isari,
"A Historical and Analytical Study of The Advent and
Development of Cinema and Motion Picture Production in Iran
(1900-1965)" (Ph. D. dissertation, University of Southern
California, 1970), P. H., p. 216.
-
"Progress
Committee Report for 1962", SMPTE JOURNAL 72 (May 1964): 359.
-
Vice-Consul
Henry S. Villard, Tehran, "Film Importers Face Difficulties in
Persia", Commerce Reports. No. 14 (April 6, 1931): 37.
-
"Movies
in the Middle East", Foreign Commerce Weekly, ll (May 29,
1943): 43.
-
John B. Grume,
"Iran", World Trade in Commodities, 7 (February 1949): 1.
-
Iran Almanac
and Book of Fact. 1966. 5th ed. (Tehran: Echo of Iran, 1966), p.
672.
-
Richard N.
Frye, Persia, rev. ed. (New York: Schochen Books, Inc., 1969), p.
36.
* Credits for this
essay goes to:
<http://www.iranchamber.com/cinema/articles/critical_history_iranian_film.php>
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