SEED OF THE SACRED FIG
(****)-VITO CARLI

"...an important film which deserves to be seen..."

A Searing Indictment of Oppressive Rule

(042425) Like the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the annual Oscars event has been going through some major changes and growing pains lately. In addition to becoming more gender and race inclusive, the awards organization seems to have become more receptive to non-American films. International cinema has been doing unexpectedly well in the recent Oscar races. This could be either a good or bad thing. While it is good that some non-American films will get more exposure, the Oscar machine often gets behind the films that are most popular with Americans rather than the films that are the most artistically significant or best represent their cultures (see: Emelia Perez).

The Korean film,
Parasite, won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2020 which was a huge surprise although it was one of that year’s strongest and most powerful films. This year, two films, Emelia Perez representing France and I’m Still Here from Brazil were both nominated for both Best International Film as well Best Picture which has never happened before. All of this would have been unthinkable only a decade ago although occasionally a foreign film would sneak into the Best Film category such as La Grand Illusion (1938) and Cries and Whispers (1972), The Postman (1994), Life is Beautiful (1997), and Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon (2000).

But the best foreign film I have seen in a long time, The Seeds of the Sacred Fig, has not gotten nearly enough praise or publicity, and it is unlikely to take home any Oscars. Also, it probably won’t be seen by many people in the US because of its difficult subject, length and language. But this Persian language film is a towering achievement that nearly matches some of the best films of the great Iranian masters, Abbas (A Taste of Cherry/The Wind will Carry Us) Kiarostami and Asghar (The Salesman/A Separation) Farhadi. Like Farhadi’s a Separation, this film examines a close knit and loving Middle Eastern family and the slow agonizing process of its gradual disintegration.

The film has gotten some international attention and significant awards. It won the Jury Prize at the last Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for Best International Film at both The Golden Globes and the Oscars. Plus, it won Best International Film by the Board of Review. This socially conscious drama is a bold critique on the misogyny and religious fanaticism of the theocratic government in the director’s home country of Iran. Although the film is strictly speaking a fictional story, the movie was inspired by a real incident in which, Mahsa Amini, a young woman was badly beaten by a police officer for not wearing her hijab properly, As a result, she ended up losing her eye and eventually she died in police custody.

The Seeds of the Sacred Fig was written and directed by Mohammed Rasoulof, who previously directed There is No Evil (2020), which should be confused with the recent Japanese film, Evil Does Not Exist (2024). The controversial and critically acclaimed There is No Evil told four stories of the death penalty in Iran. It was the first film to get its director in serious trouble with the Iranian government, and the movie was completely banned in Iran. Rasoulof was later subjected to a travel ban and for a time was prevented from leaving Iran.

He shot The Seeds of the Sacred Fig in secret after being warned of his subversive activities, and he took a significant risk by including real footage of the police brutalizing and bloodying protesters in the 2022-2023 protests in his fictional narrative. It is hard for oppressive regimes to keep their activities secret in an era where everyone has a smart phone. Then ahead of the premier of The Seeds of the Sacred Fig, the director was sentenced by Iranian authorities to eight years of jail and a whipping. They also confiscated and took possession of his all his property; He resettled to Germany here he edited the film and is suing to get his property back. Understandably he is unlikely to ever go back to his birth country and the film was picked to represent Germany for Best International Film at the Oscars. All this has made the director as big of a hero to free speech activists as the English artist/vandal Banksy and the transgressive feminist Russian band, Pussy Riot.

The Seeds of the Sacred Fig shows how the heated political situation in Iran helps to tear a formerly stable family and marriage apart.
The title refers to a species of predatory fig which raps itself around a tree and eventually strangles it. This is a great symbol for a totalitarian state like Iran which strangles and destroys the freedom loving part of its population.

Like the protagonist in Breaking Bad, the main character starts out as a good and moral dad, but he is gradually corrupted by an immoral system until he is the very definition of evil. Iman (Missagh Zareh) is a lawyer who has always dreamed of being a judge. He gets a job as an Investigating state prosecutor at the Islamic Revolutionary Court, and he is responsible for approving or rejecting the sentences of the accused felons. Initially he wants to only bust the bad guys and protect the innocent. But his superior controls him by promising he will only move up the political food chain only if he sign off on or rubber stamps all the death warrants and guilty verdicts for all the cases, without even knowing if the people deserve their punishments. He is also told he must choose his friends wisely, and he must keep his job-related actions secret from his family and friends. He must support all the actions of the oppressive regime which often punishes innocents or risk losing his job, his social standing or even his own freedom.

His wife Najmeh, played by Soheila Golestani who is an anti-hijab activist in real life, is initially on his side. She is supportive and ecstatic that he is moving up job wise. And when she sees he is morally conflicted when he possibly sends innocents to his deaths, she helps him to justify his actions by saying, “the country’s laws are God’s laws.” But his position causes serious problems with his two teenage daughters (Setareh Meleki and Mahsa Rostami). His daughters know some of the protesters personally, and they see that sometimes even innocent bystanders are being killed or crippled.

The government also issues Iman, a gun so he can protect himself in case anti-government dissidents target him. But the gun mysteriously disappears which makes him look bad to his superior and it endangers his prospects of advancement. Although he cannot prove it, he suspects that one of his daughters who have come to sympathize with the protestors stole and hid his gun.

Eventually even his naive wife begins to have doubts that he is on the right side. All this leads up to an incredibly tense and violent family confrontation which is as shocking and exciting as anything I have seen all year; it even matches the powerful climax of The Brutalist.

I originally saw this film on a big screen, which is how it should be seen, if at all possible, but by the time this review is posted it will probably be long out of cinemas Never the less the film should be seen in any format. The film is already on Apple TV and its release on video on Hulu at the end of May will allow it to reach a well-deserved wider audience.

This is an important film which deserves to be seen, pondered and written about. Compared to it, most recent films, including some of the Oscar winners like Wicked and
Emelia Perez seem trivial, shallow, and insignificant.
 

Directed & Written by:  Mohammed Rasoulof
Starring:    Soheila Golestani, Missadh Zareh,Mahsa Rostami
Released:    05/24/2024 (Cannes), 08/30/2024 (USA)
Length:    168 minutes
Rating:    PG-13 for disturbing violent content, bloody
 images, thematic content, some language and
 smoking
Available On:    At press time the film was streaming on Apple TV

For more writings by Vittorio Carli go to www.artinterviews.org and www.chicagopoetry.org. His latest book "Tape Worm Salad with Olive Oil for Extra Flavor" is also available.
Email carlivit@gmail.com

See the film trailer of the Lee Groban movie directed by Nancy Bechtol featuring Vittorio Carli.
See https://youtu.be/tWQf-UruQw

 

Upcoming features at the New Poetry Show:
Come to the New Poetry Show on the first Saturday of every month at Tangible Books in
Bridgeport from 7-9 at 3324 South Halsted.

This is now a monthly show featuring Poetry/Spoken Word, some Music, Stand Up and Performance Art and hosted by Mister Carli. Upcoming Shows include...

May 3-Christine Clark, Monica Brown, Jae Green and Genesis Jimenez

June 7- Monica B, Natty Chris Gallinari, Sandy Marchetti and Jaimie Wendt

For more information e-mail: carlivit@gmail.com for details.
 

SEED OF THE SACRED FIG © 2025 Run Way Pictures
All Rights Reserved

Review © 2025 Alternate Reality, Inc.

 

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