24.1 C
Delhi
Saturday, March 7, 2026

Amid the war, a tale of moral reckoning in Iran is fiercely urgent

When you are interrogated at Evin prison in Tehran, recalls Jafar Panahi, you are blindfolded and placed on a chair facing a wall. The interrogators are behind you, and you answer their disembodied questions on paper, lifting the blindfold to write. Their voices are “the only way you can know them”. The political prisoner starts wondering, “Are they young, are they old?”

Mr Panahi, one of Iran’s best known film-makers, has been locked up twice by its rocking theocratic regime. He drew on his and other inmates’ experiences in “It Was Just An Accident” (pictured), which is up for two Oscars on March 15th. War has made the movie’s theme of moral reckoning seem fiercely urgent. It and the director epitomise the eternal stand-off between artists and authoritarians: an unequal contest—camera and pen against bullet and noose—but not in the way it might seem.

In the film, a family’s car breaks down after hitting a dog. Vahid, a local labourer played touchingly by Vahid Mobasseri, suspects the driver (Ebrahim Azizi) is the goon who tortured him behind bars. To make certain, Vahid binds and gags the man in his van and seeks confirmation from other survivors, among them a woman posing for photos in her wedding dress. To identify him they rely on the squeak of his artificial leg, the tang of his sweat and contours of his skin; traces of the gruesome, sightless intimacy between torturer and victim.

The result is a visceral thriller, propelled by the twin mysteries of whether the ragtag crew have the right man and what they will choose to do with him. But it is also an absurdist caper. “Waiting for Godot” is namechecked when they park in a desert, beside a blasted tree, and quarrel over the captive’s fate. What, viewers may wonder, is the accident in “It Was Just An Accident”: the car hitting the dog, the driver’s run-in with Vahid, or the whole predicament of living under a brutal, capricious government?

At heart, this is an inquiry into moral responsibility under—or after—tyranny. The interrogator is merely a cog in the system, a character argues. “These scumbags created the system!” another counters. “We aren’t killers,” says one. “We’re not like them.” Others crave revenge.

Yet ultimately the story is hopeful: because it insists on the humanity even of its villain, and because it imagines, allegorically, a time of judgment. With missiles shaking Tehran, that may come sooner than anticipated. As Mr Panahi put it on a visit to London, shortly before the new conflict began, the film’s central question is, “Shall we stop the cycle of violence, or shall we allow it to continue?”

Outside the city, Vahid and his comrades are safe. Carting a kidnapped torturer around the capital is much riskier. In this the characters’ quirky odyssey reflects the peril of Mr Panahi’s unlicensed crew. They shot the passages in the desert first, he explains from behind his signature dark glasses, plus the interiors and sequences in the van. Only then did they tackle the more exposed street scenes—which the police duly interrupted.

He is used to improvising. As well as his months-long stints in prison, which included a spell in solitary confinement and a hunger strike, he has previously been banned from travelling abroad and making movies. In response he shot a film in his flat and called it “This Is Not A Film”. He drove a taxi around the city—driving was his only other skill, he jokes—recording the passengers inside it. The upshot was the inimitable “Taxi Tehran”. If you are determined to keep working, “The solution comes to you,” Mr Panahi says. Sticking with his medium has been a defiant message in itself: “It’s a way of standing up to power.”

This resilience and ingenuity may yet be called on again. In his absence abroad, Mr Panahi has been sentenced to a year in prison. (Mehdi Mahmoudian, a collaborator on the Oscar-nominated screenplay, was briefly banged up, too.) Still, before the war erupted, he planned to return after the Academy Awards. “It’s my country,” he says simply.

Even without the bombardment, Mr Panahi thought, the slaughter of protesters showed that Iran’s rulers had reached “a dead end”. In any case, if people want to stop him making movies, “That’s their problem, not mine. I’ve made my choice.” Past bids to thwart him have not just failed but backfired, his punishments transmuted on screen into drama and dignity. After all, if he hadn’t been sent to Evin, “I may never have made this film.” With all their tools of repression, in this unequal struggle with the artist, the strongmen are doomed.

For more on the latest books, films, TV shows, albums and controversies, sign up to Plot Twist, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter

Latest

Nancy Guthrie update: Mysterious ‘internet outage’ claim made, neighbors say Ring cameras stopped working

FBI investigates internet outage and related to Nancy Guthrie case as a resident reported their Ring camera footage from the night of her abduction is missing

Pak man convicted in US over Iran-linked plot to kill Trump, Biden; faces life sentence

Prosecutors said the plot was linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, though Tehran has denied involvement. The plan collapsed after Asif Merchant

Russia shared intel with Iran on US targets? Report hints at first sign by Moscow to join Middle East fighting

Two anonymous officials familiar with US intel claimed Russia provided Iran with information that could help Tehran strike American warships, aircraft etc.

Kristi Noem despises husband Bryon’s family; insider spills secrets amid Corey Lewandowski affair row

As ex-Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem's personal life is under scrutiny, new reports about her relationship with husband Bryon have emerged

Stephanie Buttermore spoke about mental health weeks before sudden death; ‘no longer struggle’

Fitness influencer Stephanie Buttermore passed away at 36, leaving behind a legacy of mental health advocacy and educational fitness content.

Topics

Rajat Dalal undergoes surgery after tendon tear worsens during The 50 task, shares health update: ‘Everything is fine’

Rajat Dalal suffered severe tendon tear during the first day of The 50 shoot and underwent successful surgery after completing his commitment to the show.

Pakistan seal Hockey World Cup spot after 8 years, put AUS tour horror behind them

Pakistan clinched qualification for the FIH Hockey World Cup 2026 with a late winner against Japan, while England dominated Malaysia to book their ticket. The t

Allu Sirish, Nayanika Reddy tie the knot: Suriya, Ram Charan, Lokesh Kanagaraj attend Allu Arjun’s brother’s wedding

Allu Sirish and Nayanika Reddy got married in Hyderabad on March 6 in the presence of their loved ones. Their wedding had a star-studded guest list. 

International Women’s Day 2026: What is the theme for this year? Know date, history, significance, celebration and more

International Women’s Day 2026: Celebrated on March 8, International Women’s Day highlights women’s achievements. Here’s the theme, history and signific

Ahmedabad calling: Airlines add special flights for IND vs NZ final rush

T20 World Cup: Flights and trains are being added as fans rush to Ahmedabad for the T20 World Cup final. With India chasing history and New Zealand eyeing their

Is buying a Rs 1 lakh iPhone on EMI a bad idea? Here’s the math you should know

Easy EMI options offered by banks and online platforms have made it possible to buy these expensive devices with monthly payments that may appear manageable at

Brendon McCullum set to continue as England coach despite Ashes humiliation

Brendon McCullum is expected to remain as England’s head coach across formats following a challenging winter, with strong support from players and the ECB ami

Saif Ali Khan tells son Ibrahim Ali Khan he must make it on his own in Bollywood: ‘I shouldn’t hold your hand’

In a podcast, Saif Ali Khan addressed nepotism and his son Ibrahim's struggles in the film industry. He believes in limited support for Ibrahim due to this.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img