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Review - Inversion

An unmarried woman's siblings interfere with her life when their mother takes ill in this well observed Iranian drama.

By Eric HillisPublished 7 years ago 3 min read
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Their figurehead, Abbas Kiarostami, may no longer be with us, but Iranian filmmakers continue to be at the forefront of mature, adult oriented drama. Asghar Farhadi regularly picks up awards across the globe, most notably with Oscars for A Separation and The Salesman. Despite being 'banned' from filmmaking in his native land, Jafar Panahi has managed to produce some of the most invigorating work of his career under such conditions with experimental films like Closed Curtain and Taxi Tehran. And from a society not known for its gender equality, Behnam Behzadi now gives us one of 2017's most well developed female leads in family drama Inversion.

Said protagonist is Niloofar (Sahar Dowlatshahi, an actress with a Hollywood smile if ever there were one), a thirty-something Tehranian woman who seems to have built herself a good life. She runs a successful if modest garment business and has begun dating a handsome, rich suitor who seems like a genuinely nice guy (Ali Reza Aghakhani).

Niloofar's life is turned upside down however when her aging live-in mother (Shirin Yazdanbakhsh) is taken into hospital with respiratory problems. Doctors inform Niloofar and her siblings, brother Farhad (Ali Mosaffa) and sister Homa (Roya Javidnia), that their mother's only hope of survival is to move away from the pollution of Tehran. Behind their sister's back, Farhad and Homa decide Niloofar should move to the country with their mother, reasoning that being unmarried, she has no other responsibilities.

Behzadi, like many of his Iranian contemporaries, likely set out to address the treatment of women in his country, but remove the headscarves and this is a universal scenario. Even in the most tolerant western societies, unmarried women, and to a lesser degree men, are still viewed as failures by many, regardless of whether their single status is of their own choosing or not. The decision to eschew marrying and starting a family paints such women as irresponsible. This is the stick that Farhad and Homa use to beat their sister into submission, ignoring how she's built up a successful business, as though it's simply a hobby of hers.

Though worse things happen to women in the Middle East on a daily basis, the psychological bullying of Niloofar is perhaps more relatable for western audiences than, say, a woman being stoned for adultery (in much the same way a paper cut produces louder screams from an audience than a beheading), and you'll find your blood boiling at the arrogance and insensitivity of her narcissistic siblings. The summer blockbuster season will offer us villains intent on destroying worlds and galaxies, but none will match the antagonism of Mosaffa's Farhad, whose harassment of his sister verges on the physical at times in a stark reminder of the male-oriented society the drama is set in; failing in his own business ventures, much of Farhad's resentment seems to come from wounded male pride. Such is the intimidation of Niloofar by her unfeeling family that her cellphone's generic ring-tone begins to take on the qualities of a stabbing synth score from a slasher movie, inspiring stress whenever it buzzes to life. I doubt we'll witness a more effective use of music in a movie this year.

You don't need to be an expert on Persian culture to guess how things turn out here, but while our heroine may not prosper in the manner we'd like, there's another character - Niloofar's teenage niece Saba (Setareh Hosseini), who looks up to her independent aunt and dares to take her side - that suggests the future of Iran may not be in such bad hands.

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