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Director: Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Script: Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Cinematography: Homayun Pievar, Mehrdad Fakhimi and Ali Reza
Zarrindast
Editor: Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Music: Madjid Entezami
Cast: Zohreh Sarmadi, Esmail Soltanian, Behzad Behzadpour,
Morteza Zarrabi

Production: Art Bureau of the Organization for the Propaganda
of Islamic Thought

Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Boycott
Bread and Flower
Kandahar
Marriage of the Blessed
Once Upon a Time,
Cinema
Testing Democracy
from ('Tales from an Island')
The Actor
The Cyclist
The Day I Became a
Woman
The Door (from 'Kish Tales')
The Peddler |
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THE PEDDLER
DASTFOROUGH

Iran, 1987, 90 min, color
The first part, "Happy Child", is based on a short story by Alberto Moravia. An impoverished couple worried about their daughter's future tries to find an adoptive home for their little girl. In the second part - "Birth of an Old Woman", a man diagnosted with a mental instability tries to care for his aging mother. Part three, "The Peddler", concerns a peddler who is witness to a gangland murder. He is constantly plagued by visions of the mob who are trying to kill him.
"Despite their dour-sounding subject matter, all three episodes have gentle humor and lush color. Makhmalbaf lapses into pretension occasionally but displays fine skills, especially in the final section where the shootouts almost have a mainstream U.S. gangster-pic feel."
Variety
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MOHSEN MAKHMALBAF


One of the most popular and influential Iranian filmmakers is born
in 1957 in a poor neighborhood in Tehran. At the age of 15, he quit
school to provide for his family. He became involved with a militant
terrorist group battling against the Shah's regime. at the age of
17 he was sentenced to die after stabbing a policeman. Ultimately,
his youth allowed him to escape the fate of a firing squad, and after
serving only five years of his sentence he was freed in the wake of
the country's 1979 Islamic revolution. After his release Makhmalbaf
helped establish an artists' group known as the Center for the Propagation
of Islamic Thought, and he became a prolific writer of plays, essays,
short stories, and finally screenplays.
His first filmed script was 1981's "The Explanation", filmed by Manuchehr
Haghaniparast and he directed his first feature "Nassouh's Repentance"
in 1983. Throughout the remainder of the decade, he wrote and directed
roughly one film a year, each wildly different in style and content.
With 1986's "The Peddler", Makhmalbaf first began attracting international
film-festival attention. With 1990's "Time of Love" and its immediate
follow-up, "The Nights of Zayandeh Roud", he also came under the scrutiny
of the censors, which promptly banned both features.
While making 1993's "The Actor", a satire of the media in contemporary
Iran, his first wife burned to death in a domestic accident (he later
married her sister Marzieh Meshkini). With 1996's "Gabbeh", he even
found U.S. distribution for his work. Makhmalbaf was also the subject
of several documentaries, among them Abbas Kiarostami's "Close-Up".

1983 Tobeh Nosuh
1984 Do Cheshman Beesu
1984 Este'aze
1986 Boycott
1987 Dastforough
1989 Bicycleran
1989 Arousi-ye Khouban
1990 Nobat e asheghi
1991 Shabhaye Zayendeh-Rood
1992 Nassereddin Shah, Actor-e Cinema
1993 Honarpisheh
1995 Salaam Cinema
1996 Gabbeh
1996 Nun va Goldoon
1998 Sokhout
1999 Ghesse Haye Kish - segment "The Door"
2000 Tales of an Island - segment "Testing Democracy"
2001 Safar e Ghandehar
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