Where
Is The Friend's Home? Movie Review:
Over
the years, I've read enough articles which waded into the
debate on the quality of films from Iran. Some say they
are masterpieces, completely alien from Western films, and
innovative in structure and story. Others, however, say
they are often the most excruciatingly boring examples of
art-house twaddle. Roger Ebert and others seemed rather
angered that Taste of Cherry won the Palme D'or at Cannes,
because it was such a boring experience.
Where
is the Friend's Home, directed by Cherry's Abbas Kiarostami,
also suffers - or, at least, it made my eyes suffer, until
they nearly closed completely from the exhaustion. The movie
looks as though it will be good, in its own quiet way, but.......
everything drags on and on and on.... toward a payoff as
simple as it is undeveloped. Then again, boring films can
be created, not by the filmmakers, but by subjective conditions.
Picture this -- here I was, running on five hours sleep,
with a brutal case of a plugged right ear, which needed
a doctor's attention the next day, and my viewing choice
was a film from Iran. A recipe for disaster!
The
story - a kid always seems to forget his notebook before
going to school. Already, he has suffered the verbal punishment
from his teacher twice, and is threatened with expulsion
if he forgets his homework one more time. Later, his classmate
helps him up from a fall, and, apparently, in the process,
the fallen student loses his notebook once again, because
later on, it is in the other kid's possession, and he has
to return the book back or else the kid will be expelled.
The rest of the movie is his attempt to find the kid's house
and return the book.
Sounds
like a cute little movie, right? Like Truffaut, maybe? Wrong.
Where is the Friend's Home is such a boring, tedious drone.
Sure, okay, I was half asleep anyway, as I usually am in
the middle of the afternoon if I had a lack of sleep the
night before, but isn't it possible that Abbas Kiarostami
assisted in giving me tired eyes? (Hey, doctor, forget my
plugged ear, I think I have Kiarostami-itis, or maybe Abbas-atosis)
The movie just goes on and on for 90 minutes, without much
excitement, or even compelling storytelling. I really don't
think that Kiarostami can even direct to save his life.
He just sits the camera down, and records every little minutia
without really figuring out its usefulness to the story.
Possibly
the most glaring example of this sort of direction is the
scene in which the kid tries to tell his mother that he
has to bring back the book. This isn't just one little moment
in which the kid says that he has to bring back the book,
while the mother says that you have to do your homework
before you go out and play. This lasts for about six to
seven minutes, and there is not a shred of buildup or variation
to this scene; just the visual equivalent of a broken record.
The rest of the movie is little different, as the kid sneaks
out of the house to find the kid, first by travelling over
his neighbourhood, and then to the next village. Each place
he goes he asks where the kid lives, without any useful
answers. Couldn't he have least had some interesting adventures?
Maybe discovered some interesting things?
The
only really interesting scenes in the whole movie involve
what happens in the classroom. At least we have the appearance
of conflict; when the teacher walks in to the room, he uses
his authority much like that of a dictator, if a deceptively
soft-spoken one. These are the only compelling scenes in
the movie, although there does seem to be a general theme
concerning authority figures and their tyranny upon children,
and how different commands seem to contradict each other.
For example, you have the parents of children making them
do chores around the home, while the teacher says forcefully
that homework comes first, even before chores. There is
a key exchange between the boy's uncle and another villager
about the need to encourage discipline - and corporal punishment
- against children, even at the expense of boosting the
child's self-esteem. Directly, he says that it is more crucial
to give the child a regular beating than it is to give the
child frequent praise; at least with the punishment, he
will understand right and wrong (well, that's the old idiot's
excuse).
Even
with this content, the movie fails. There is very little
style. There is no sense of character or motivation - the
events are so arbitrary, so as to stretch the running time,
and the characters are poorly developed. There is no reason
to be attached to them. And the ending is possibly the biggest
cop-out ever, because it solves absolutely nothing. In a
better movie, it would be cute, but here, it's just a huge
letdown.
Iran
is apparently a bastion of cinematic talent. Okay, Gabbeh
had its charms; and Children of Heaven is a genuinely fine
movie, also about children, and far, far more accessible
and entertaining than this movie. But I don't know how to
account for Where is the Friend's Home, a movie difficult
by any standards, and pointless and dull by most of them.
That does not mean I won't try any more Iranian films. My
local store, oddly, has a fair number of films from Abbas
Kiarostami and Mohsen Makhmalbaf (Gabbeh), and I will try
to get through one or two more before I can make any broad
generalization of an entire film culture.
David
Macdonald
Site
Contents Copyright© The Z Review, unless used with permission.This
site has no intention to infringe on the rights of the film
owners of Where Is The Friend's Home? and intellectual copyright holders of the
movies mentioned herein & hold copyright over the movie,
characters, merchandise & storyline.