Sadly,
once again, my screening of “Rhino Season” was affected by the fact that I was
suffering from illness and was quite tired.
My concentration levels were ultimately lowered and I struggled a little
with this film and as a result my memory of it has also suffered.
From the
MIFF guide, the story of “Rhino Season” is about “a poet during the reign of
Shah is imprisoned as part of Iran’s destructive Islamic revolution due to
petty jealousies of a driver who desires his beautiful wife. Released after serving a tortuous 30-year
sentence, he sets out to reunite with the woman he loves”.
The main
thing I remember about “Rhino Season” is just how incredibly sad the whole
story is; first with how the poet, Sahel, is initially imprisoned for such a
lengthy time over such a trivial matter, second the fact that his wife Mina
thinks him dead for over twenty years while he is still suffering within the
prison, and finally, the ending of the film (which I will not give away). In fact the whole film permeates with sadness
throughout and even though the film is beautiful at times, it is also really
depressing. While I attempt to see every
Iranian film that plays at MIFF (even though “Rhino Season” is actually a Iraqi
Kurdistan/Turkey co-production, director Bahman Ghobadi comes from Iran), there
was another reason I was so keen to see “Rhino Season” and that was the
inclusion of Monica Bellucci in the cast.
Bellucci is an incredible actress who seems capable of performing with
any language. Here she speaks Persian
fluently and comes across as very convincing as an Iranian woman. Her performance is very subdued and subtle,
filled with tiny movements as opposed to large gestures. She is quietly spoken and there is a sadness
behind her eyes, as well as a tiredness when we see her later in life, that totally
exposes how hard life has been for her after her own prison sentence. Early on in the film before her arrest, she
shines in her opulence surrounded by her glamorous mansion and possessions,
that to see her the way she is towards the finale is just heartbreaking.
Behrouz
Vossoughi is devastating in his performance as the poet who loses everything in
his life, and like Bellucci excels in his depiction of a person weary from the
horrors of his life. His role is mainly
a silent one, as he barely speaks, but there is no doubting the pain and anger
within him. We witness Sahel silently pining for his wife from a distance as he
recognizes the pain in Mina’s eyes while remembering the good times they
shared. What appears to be a search for
redemption, as Sahel looks for the woman he loves, ends up becoming a quest for
revenge and reason that will ultimately destroy the poet’s life for good.
The
greatest aspect of “Rhino Season” is its amazing visual style and
cinematography from Turaj Aslani. This
is a seriously beautiful film that is full of gorgeous images that will make
your jaw drop. One scene that has to be
seen to be believed is a scene when Sahel is tied up to a pole, when the sky
opens up and begins to rain turtles. It
is stunningly beautiful and surreal all at once. In fact the more “Rhino Season” goes along,
the more surreal it becomes with images becoming symbolic rather than depicting
the truth. The image of the rhino
becomes a frequent and powerful one in the final third of the film, but as
beautiful as it is, unfortunately the rhino has been rendered via CGI which is
not of the best quality.
Overall,
I found “Rhino Season” to be a beautiful film but an incredibly sad one. Due to the film’s slow pace and surreal tone
in places, this isn’t going to be a film for everyone but it has been well
acted and gorgeously shot. The story is
based on a true story and being a film that criticizes the Islamic regime AND
features female nudity within it, the entire film had to be shot in Turkey, as
opposed to Iran due to censorship in that country, so whatever you may think of
the film, you have to respect the filmmaker’s dedication to getting the story
made.
3 Stars.
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