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Farrokh Ghaffari

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Name
  
Farrokh Ghaffari

Role
  
Film director

Movies
  
Shabe Quzi, Zanburak


Farrokh Ghaffari 1bpblogspotcomH0OojKHhmrEUYzoHPbnZDIAAAAAAA

Born
  
Occupation
  
Director, film critic, author, actor

Died
  
December 17, 2006, Paris, France

Spouse
  
Mahshid Amirshahi (m. ?–2006)

Similar People
  
Jalal Moghadam, Parviz Sayyad, Mohammad‑Ali Keshavarz, Mahshid Amirshahi, Pari Saberi

farrokh ghaffari ata omidvar


Farrokh Ghaffari (1921 – 17 December 2006) was an Iranian film director, actor, critic and author. Along with Ebrahim Golestan and Fereydoun Rahnema he was one of the founders of Iran's New Wave film movement. By establishing the first National Iranian Film Society in 1949 at the Iran Bastan Museum and organizing the first Film Week during which English films were exhibited, Ghaffari laid the foundation for alternative and non-commercial films in Iran.

Contents

Farrokh GHAFFAR cinema tecquede l,Iran Ata Omidvarفرخ غفاری عطاامیدوار


Early life

Ghaffari was born in Tehran, but was educated in Belgium and at the University of Grenoble in France.

In 1958, Ghaffari made one of the first neorealist films in Iranian cinema, Jonoub-e Shahr (South of the City). Because of its depictions of working class poverty the film was banned by the Shah's government, who feared the Soviet Union would use it as a propaganda tool to show the distressed economic condition of Iran's lower classes. In 1963, a heavily edited version of the film entitled Reghabat Dar Shahr (Urban Rivalry) was finally released. In 1964, he produced and directed his next film Shab-e Quzi (Night of the Hunchback). Based on One Thousand and One Nights, the film was originally set during the time of Caliph Harun al-Rashid but was changed to contemporary times because of censor objections. Shab-e Quzi is a black comedy about smugglers who try to hide the body of a dead hunchback who is left on their doorstep. The film starred Ghaffari and Mohammad-Ali Keshavarz in his film debut. Ghaffari worked for National Iranian Television during this time. In 1975, Ghaffari released his final film Zanbourak (The Running Canon) starring Parviz Sayyad and Shahnaz Tehrani. In 1979 with the onslaught of the Iranian Revolution, Ghaffari moved to Paris, where he worked as a film critic for the magazine Positif. He lived in exile in Paris until his death in 2006.

Feature films

  • 1958: Jonoub-e Shahr (South of the City)
  • 1960 ArusKodumeh? (Who is the Bride?)
  • 1965: Shab-e Quzi (Night of the Hunchback)
  • 1975: Zanbourak (The Running Canon)
  • Mard-e Kerayei (Rent Man) (unfinished)
  • Documentaries

  • Siman-eTehran Norouzeman (Our New Year)
  • Daryaye Pars (Persian Gulf)
  • Zendegi Naft (Oil and Life)
  • Vezarat Sanaye Va Maaden (Ministry of Industry and Mines)
  • References

    Farrokh Ghaffari Wikipedia


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