offoffoff film
 RELATED PROJECTS

      








 ADVERTISEMENT













Site links
  • OFFOFFOFF Home
  • About OFFOFFOFF
  • Contact us

    Get our newsletter:
     
    Search the site:
     

    Film section
  • Film main page
  • Film archive
  • Audio index
  • Film links


    Top 10 lists


  • Top 10 films of 2004
    (Andrea, David, Joshua, Leslie)
  • Top 10 films of 2003
    (Andrea, David, Joshua, Leslie)
  • Top 10 films of 2002
  • Top 10 films of 2001
  • Top 10 films of 2000
  • Top 10 films of 1999
  •  All of our top 10 lists, 1999 - 2004

    Current movies


  • The Children of Huang Shi
  • Encounters at the End of the World
  • Funny Games
  • Gunnin' For That #1 Spot
  • The Last Mistress
  • Let's Get Lost
  • The Orphanage
  • Reprise
  • Stuck
  • Tell No One
  • Trumbo
  • The Visitor
  • The Wackness
  • War Inc.

    Festivals


  • Brooklyn International Film Festival
  • New York Film Festival
  • New York Korean Film Festival
  • Seattle International Film Festival

    Archive


    Complete archive

    Recent reviews:
  • 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days
  • 9 Songs
  • After the Day Before
  • After You
  • Bubble
  • Cape of Good Hope
  • Capote
  • City of Men
  • The Collective
  • The Constant Gardener
  • Coyote
  • Crash
  • Crawford
  • Crying Out Love in the Center of the World
  • The Definition of Insanity
  • Don't Move
  • The Education of Shelby Knox
  • Escape Artists
  • Eternal
  • Evilenko
  • Fix
  • Frozen
  • Grizzly Man
  • Happily Ever After
  • Horrible Child
  • Junebug
  • Land of Plenty
  • Lords of Dogtown
  • March of the Penguins
  • Max and Grace
  • Mondovino
  • Nightingale in a Music Box
  • Nine Lives
  • Oldboy
  • One Bright Shining Moment
  • The Real Dirt on Farmer John
  • Regular Lovers
  • Snow Angels
  • Standard Operating Procedure
  • The Syrian Bride
  • There Will Be Blood
  • Through the Forest
  • Winter Solstice
  • The World
  • Yes
  • 2046

  •  ADVERTISEMENT
     REVIEW: THE CIRCLE

      The Circle
    The chador-ing classes

    "The Circle" spends a few minutes each with a series of characters, illustrating, at once profoundly and shallowly, the desperation of women in Iran.

    By JOSHUA TANZER
    Offoffoff.com


    As "The Circle" opens, we're in an Iranian maternity ward at the moment of a not-so-blessed event — the birth of a child. The family has been the victim of a medical deception, they realize, when a nurse tells the new grandmother that her daughter has just had an adorable baby girl.

    THE CIRCLE
    Original title: Dayereh.
    Directed by: Jafar Panahi.
    Written by: Kambuzia Partovi.
    Cast: Maryiam Palvin Almani, Nargess Mamizadeh, Fereshteh Sadr Orfani, Monir Arab, Elham Saboktakin, Fatemeh Naghavi, Mojgan Faramarzi.
    In Persian with English subtitles.
      
    "A girl!" cries the distraught woman. "The ultrasound said it was a boy! The relatives will be furious — they'll insist on a divorce!"

    Confusingly, this is the last we see of this situation. The film follows one woman after another in a chain of stories focusing on women's plight in Iran.

    After the birth of the child, two women emerge from the hospital to call the family but find themselves constantly ducking the police, cowering in doorways and behind cars, taunted by men, just because they are women by themselves on the street. Just getting change for the phone turns out to be a monumental task.

      
      The film gives some quick, powerful impressions of the Iranian woman's plight, but much less than if it had paused to tell a few stories thoroughly.
      
    From them, we move on to a woman searching for an abortion doctor because she is pregnant from a final visit with her husband before his execution. She is the most dramatic of the movie's characters, who are virtually powerless in their separate situations but seem to at least share a conspiratorial glint in the eye when they see one another.

    "The Circle" is undoubtedly daring for a film from Iran, where, in fact, it cannot be shown. But it feels both profound and superficial at the same time. We see a number of women's struggles with their repressive society, but each for only a few, unconvincing minutes. Only the very last scene attempts to pull the entire sequence together — to bring it full circle, as it were — and it doesn't change the hasty treatment of each of the segments that came before. The film — by the director of the acclaimed but tedious "The White Balloon" — gives some quick, powerful impressions of the Iranian woman's plight, but much less than if it had paused to tell a few stories thoroughly.

    APRIL 13, 2001
    OFFOFFOFF.COM • THE GUIDE TO ALTERNATIVE NEW YORK


    Reader comments on The Circle:

    • good   from adrian, Sept. 24, 2001
      • Prostitution is illegal!   from Parisa, May 28, 2002
        • Re: Prostitution is illegal!   from Dave, Nov. 6, 2003
          • Re: Prostitution is illegal!   from Barbara Pollacsek, Dec. 16, 2006
        • Prostitution is illegal!   from Hamid PS26, Nov. 15, 2003
        • Re: Prostitution is illegal!   from Brandon, Jan. 19, 2004
          • Re: Prostitution is illegal!   from Klaus, June 26, 2005
    • Excellent   from Marie-Joelle, April 14, 2002
    • I think it was an excellent movie   from Elham, April 28, 2003
      • Re: I think it was an excellent movie   from Pat McLaughlin, June 19, 2003
    • Yawn!   from brendan, Aug. 31, 2005

    Post a comment on "The Circle"