#zar amir
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aliciasgard · 1 year ago
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Jury of the 20th Edition of the Marrakech International Film Festival presided by Jessica Chastain surrounded by Zar Amir, Camille Cottin, Joel Edgerton, Joanna Hogg, Dee Rees, Tarik Saleh, Alexander Skarsgård and Leila Slimani.
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brown-eyes-blue · 3 months ago
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cinecritik · 3 months ago
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Bien sûr, que tout le monde est d’accord pour rejeter le régime actuel de l’Iran, mais le consensus implicite de #tatami vide de sa substance toutes nuances, rendant le film prévisible dans son épilogue et finalement superficiel. Une petite déception.
www.cinecritik.com
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carloskaplan · 6 days ago
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 Zar Amir Ebrahimi en Holy Spider (2022)
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scenesandscreens · 2 years ago
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Holy Spider (2022)
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Director - Ali Abbasi, Cinematography - Nadim Carlsen
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watchingalotofmovies · 3 months ago
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Tatami
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Tatami    [trailer]
Midway through the Judo World Championships, an Iranian female judo fighter and her coach receive an ultimatum from the Islamic Republic ordering her to fake an injury and lose, lest she be branded a traitor of the state.
Very tense sports drama in the form of a political thriller that's a gripping watch.
The black and white visuals and the tight, indoor setting add to the tension.
The two directors were also able to stage some very realistic looking fight scenes. And it has two great lead performances at its centre.
Side note, not entirely surprising, there's a real story behind the film.
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distort251 · 2 years ago
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Holy Spider (2022) / Cinematography by Nadim Carlsen
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filmap · 2 years ago
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Holy Spider Ali Abbasi. 2022
Asia Hotel WWWJ+6FQ, Quraysh St., Amman, Jordan See in map
See in imdb
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jastrups · 2 years ago
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higherentity · 2 years ago
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fictionz · 9 months ago
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I have never fancasted a thing in my life but there's a heist movie starring Zar Amir Ebrahimi and Kōji Yakusho that needs to be made.
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hmzawy · 2 years ago
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Holy Spider (2022)
Dir. Ali Abbasi
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occlusivavelare · 2 years ago
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whileiamdying · 2 years ago
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Holy Spider review: a brutal serial killer tale
Posted by David Baldwin | Jan 20, 2023 | Reviews
Ali Abassi’s Holy Spider retells the story of Iranian murderer The Spider Killer – but smartly avoids glorifying his actions.
This review contains  light spoilers.
Basing a film on the actions of a real life serial killer is a contentious decision for any filmmaker. Most mass murderers yearn for some kind of notoriety, and what easier way to achieve that than being immortalised in popular culture? By depicting their crimes on screen, said filmmaker is effectively giving them exactly what they want. It’s a testament to the skills and sensitivities of director Ali Abbasi that his new film Holy Spider manages to largely avoid that trap by turning the story of the Iranian murderer known as the Spider Killer into something much more far-reaching. The film shifts focus between the characters of a fictionalised journalist named Rahimi (Zar Amir-Ebrahimi) and the killer Saeed (Mehdi Bajestani), a former soldier who targets sex workers in the holy city of Mashhad. Rahimi comes up against numerous obstacles solely because of being a woman, whilst it soon becomes clear that there are many in Mashhad who see Saeed’s actions as admirable, effectively cleaning up the streets of ‘unclean’ prostitutes. This is where Holy Spider justifies its existence. Early on, the scenes of women being brutally murdered make it seem like Abbasi is – like many others before him – falling into the trap of celebrating a monster. Yet as the story unfolds we see how misogyny has been weaved into the very fabric of an entire society. Saeed is depicted as a broken and pathetic man, but his crimes are practically deified by those who suggest a higher power has a hand in his violent acts. The two performances from Amir-Ebrahimi and Bajestani are note-perfect, and the way in which Abbasi skilfully blends reality with fantasy ensures that even those familiar with the real life case of the Spider Killer will be questioning where exactly the story will end up. Abbasi even uses that knowledge against the more informed viewer in the film’s latter half, making them question whether he’s willing to offer an alternative history (and ending) for the Spider Killer in order to really make his point. Ultimately though, he doesn’t have to, and Abbasi makes that most apparent in the film’s most galling moment. It’s one saved for the very last, as Saeed’s son – recorded by Rahimi on a handheld camera – matter-of-factly uses his younger sister to demonstrate how his father committed his gruesome crimes, placing his knee on her throat, rolling her body up in a carpet and even suggesting that he would consider following in his father’s bloody footsteps. And why not? His father is a hero. The message is clear. A film like Holy Spider doesn’t need to glorify a monster, because society already has.
Holy Spider is in cinemas now.
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fieldcinema · 2 years ago
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Holy Spider, 2022 Dir. Ali Abbasi
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cinevisto32 · 7 days ago
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Araña sagrada (2023)
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