Banned Iranian filmmaker’s ‘Taxi’ hailed at Berlinale

Jafar Panahi’s film features him chauffeuring around Tehran, with passengers commenting on the death penalty in Iran.


Reuters February 07, 2015
Jury member Shirin Neshat stands next to Panahi’s picture before presenting his co-director Kamboziya Partovi with a ‘Best Script’ Silver Bear for the film Parde at last year’s Berlinale. PHOTO: REUTERS/FABRIZIO BENSCH/FILES

BERLIN: Banned Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, who has defied the authorities before by smuggling a film out of Iran, did it again at the Berlin International Film Festival on Friday with his film Taxi. The superficially whimsical but ultimately profound look at life and filmmaking in Iran, shot from the interior of a taxi with the director at the wheel, was shown despite a 20-year state ban imposed on Panahi.

He is not under arrest but can be jailed by the judiciary at any time. Two years ago, he smuggled a movie to the Berlin festival on a USB drive, eliciting a protest to the festival from the Islamic Republic. At Friday’s premiere, festival director Dieter Kosslick didn’t say how Panahi’s film made it to the German capital, but he applauded his decision to continue making movies. “Panahi never accepted his 20-year ban and tried to make his work because he cannot live without making films and, by accident, we got this film here, maybe with a taxi?” Kosslick quipped.



In the film, Panahi chauffeurs an odd assortment of people around Tehran, including two women who think they will die if they do not get two goldfish to the Ali Springs before noon. A male passenger, who admits he is a “freelance mugger,” argues in favour of the death penalty for criminals, with a woman teacher in the backseat, who thinks capital punishment is too severe for someone who steals to feed his family. She adds that only China executes more people than Iran.

A girl playing Panahi’s niece tells her uncle after he picks her up from school that her teacher has told her the rules for making a “distributable film” in Iran. It cannot show anything sordid, which is what Panahi has been filming from his taxi, and the characters must be named after Islamic saints.

Kosslick said Panahi’s wife and the actor playing the niece attended the premiere, while an empty chair was left for the director as he had not been expected to be allowed to travel to Berlin for the occasion. He said he did not think Panahi’s relations with the Islamic authorities were as dire as they were two years ago, when Tehran complained to the festival for giving Panahi an award for an allegorical movie made in defiance of the state ban.



“Jafar is in a much better mood as a person because he is the cab driver in the film, and he is a funny cabdriver and has a lot of humour, which is good, because he was depressed three years ago,” said Kosslick. He said he had discussed the film with the Iranian Embassy and, while officials there “did not accept” it, he added, “I have not got the feeling that they (will) put more pressure on him — 20 years is already enough.” Panahi’s film is one of 19 vying for the Berlin festival’s annual Golden Bear prize.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 8th, 2015.

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