The Silence (1998 film)

The Silence (Sokout)

DVD cover
Directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Produced by Marin Karmitz
Written by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Starring Tahmineh Normatova
Cinematography Ebrahim Ghafori
Edited by Mohsen Makhmalbaf
Release dates
  • 1998 (1998)
Running time
76 minutes
Country Iran
Tajikistan
France
Language Persian

The Silence (Persian: سکوت) is an Iranian film from 1998. It is directed by the well known Iranian film maker Mohsen Makhmalbaf. The movie is about a little boy who has the onerous task of earning money for his family, but is always enchanted and distracted by music. It is set in Tajikistan.

Synopsis

Khorshid lives with his mom in a house near a river somewhere in Tajikistan. The landlord comes around every morning to ask for the rent. Khorshid has to provide the money or else they'll have to leave. His blindness has given him an amazing skill in tuning musical instruments which gets him a job at an instrument making workshop. But the problem is That Khorshid is mesmerized by sonorous music all the time; whenever he hears a great musician play, he loses track of time and place. This causes him to lose his place and have to work late. He struggles to find a balance between his love of music and his task as a breadwinner.

Overview

Makhmalbaf is a pretty controversial figure. Just as an example, "when he was seventeen years old he had picked up a knife to attack a police officer to steal his gun to rob a bank to launch a revolution."[1] His revolutionary zeal is manifest through his first works, e.g. Boycott (film). He himself divided his works into four phases in an article in The New York Times: "The first four films, made before 1985, are thinly disguised religious proselytizing. From 1985 to 1990, when the ruling mullahs loosened censorship enough to allow movies to focus on general social problems, his perspective changed...After this, Mr. Makhmalbaf largely abandoned traditional narrative...First, he made what he calls his philosophical films, then he made the recent poetic movies that have landed him in trouble with the censors."[2] Sokout belongs to his poetic style of film making, where he gets rid of the shackles of classical narration and depicts some of his favorite themes by using symbolism coming from Sufi traditions.

Sufism , Music and Universal Truth

The movie is replete with Symbols of Sufism. From the use of music to achieve ecstasy; the nature, and the broken mirror, the repeated image of the river, to the light coming from above, the symbolic representation of mystic interpretations of Islam get promoted during the whole course of the movie. But Makhmalbaf doesn't stay local on this matter. His use of Symphony No. 5 (Beethoven) shows that he deliberately wants to say the themes he is referring to are of a universal nature according to him, and not just mundane, ephemeral, matters. The broken mirror is an icon borrowed from Rumi, which represents only a part of the truth. Everyone possesses a part of the mirror, i.e. a part of the truth, and thinks she has all of it. But, of course to a Sufi, none of the parts equals to the whole truth. Professor Ridgeon is among those who emphasize extensively on the implications of the mirror in Makhmalbaf's movies, particularly this one.[3]

Cast

Awards

References

  1. Dabashi, Hamid. (2009) Post-Orientalism: Knowledge and Power in Time of Terror. page 172
  2. http://www.nytimes.com/1997/06/08/movies/an-unlikely-auteur-from-iran.html
  3. Ridgeon, L. (2000) ’Makhmalbaf ’s broken mirror: the socio-political significance of modern Iranian cinema

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