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At Five In The Afternoon
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Our DVD Price: £7.99 RRP:
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Film Description
One of the first films to be made in post-Taliban Afghanistan follows the plight of Noqreh, a progressive young woman trying to school herself in spite of her father's proscriptions. Both old and new generations find themselves victims of a tragic historical situation in a ravaged country.
Film Information
| Director | Samira Makhmalbaf | ||||
| Genre | World Cinema
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| Country | Iran / France | Language | FARSI/KURDISH | Year | 2003 |
DVD Extras
Interview with Samira Makhmalbaf; Behind the scenes featurette; Theatrical trailer; Samira Makhmalbaf biograpy.
Technical Details
| Certificate | PG | Length | 102 mins | Label | ART-E | ||
| Cat No | ART279DVD | Format | DVD | Colour | |||
| Region | 2 | Aspect | Widescreen | ||||
| Subtitles | English. | ||||||
5 Stills
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Review by Julian Upton on 13th August 2004
At Five in the Afternoon is the latest release from the celebrated House of Makhmalbaf, Iran’s remarkable family of film-makers. Samira Makhmalbaf was just 18 when her directorial debut, The Apple, was internationally acclaimed in 1998. Her father, Mohsen, who served as and writer and editor on the project, was credited with much of its success, but it is clear Samira is at least as driven as he is, and that her work is very much her own. Indeed, At Five in the Afternoon shows a definite development of the style and sensibility that she brought to The Apple.
An indictment of the oppression that still faces women in post-Taliban Afghanistan, At Five has an intuitive humanity that complements its heartfelt polemic. The film follows Noqreh, an ambitious student, from her eagerness to take advantage of the mooted freedoms of her newly-liberated country to the stark realisation that she remains trapped, not just by the devastated landscape but also by its ongoing traditions.
Noqreh’s aspirational spirit is sublimely evoked by Makhmalbaf. A pair of white, high-heeled shoes serves as a playful leitmotif for her unleashed femininity and ambition – she dons them at every opportunity, and you sometimes feel she might click them together like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz. But Kabul’s dusty roads do not lead to any cathartic revelation; indeed, the journey is not destined for a happy ending.
The visual assurance displayed in At Five certainly belies the age of its director, who extracts a painterly beauty from the crowd shots, with their seas of female faces wrapped in pale blue Berkas. At other times, the use of non-professional actors gives a primitive feel to the film. But if this combination of rawness and design points to a new film culture in its infancy, then this in itself is optimistic.
View more reviews by Julian Upton
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Review by Chris Jones on 12th August 2004
Samira Makhmalbaf's third feature, and the first film to be shot in Afghanistan post-Taliban, is another remarkable piece of work from one of world cinema's brightest talents. Although less of a stunningly assured surprise than her debut, THE APPLE, and less obviously an allegory of political struggle than the magnificent BLACKBOARDS, AT 5 IN THE AFTERNOON concentrates instead on one young woman's situation in a country torn by oppression and war. Despite her marginalised status, Noqreh remains fiercely ambitious and determined to overcome the suffocating strictures of a society clearly unready and unwilling to countenance the advancement of women. However, the film's winning central protagonist, a young Afghani woman called Noqreh, is determinedly optimistic in spite of all evidence to the contrary. Ms. Makhmalbaf shows an acute sense of telling observation in the scenes of her (almost equally!) young protagonist's attempts to fulfil her aspirations and desires; the fact tha t the country is Afghanistan makes no difference to the impact and the universality of the age-old themes of love, hope and family duty. Noqreh, played with total conviction and a charming lack of self-absorbtion by the beautiful Agheleh Rezaee, is repeatedly shot exchanging her traditional burka clothng and flat, characterless slippers, for white, high-heeled shoes, earrings and more colourful dress, a beautiful, simple and richly symbolic gesture of rejection of male-imposed values and tradition. The director also demonstrates a subtle understanding of the family ties that bind her heroine, refusing to opt for the obvious demonisation of Noqreh's fearsome father in favour of a more balanced yet powerfully resonant portrayal of a difficult relationship. And Makhmalbaf closes this marvellous film with a brave coda: after Noqreh's father has insisted they flee Kabul for the safety of the desert, the prospects look bleak. Yet we have seen more than enough evidence of Noqreh's independent, stubborn refusal to give up on her dreams to feel far more optimistic than the stark imagery suggests. Brilliant film-making from a director of both style and substance and a film not to be missed.
View more reviews by Chris Jones
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Article - "Interview with Samira Makhmalbaf (Part One)"
by Courtesy of Artificial Eye
Thursday 8th July 2004
After making BLACKBOARDS in Kurdistan, what drew you to Afghanistan for AT FIVE IN THE AFTERNOON?
We live in a world where a single attack on the US has led in less than two years to the collapse of two countries. If everything is so inter-related, ho... View article in full
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Article - "Interview with Samira Makhmalbaf (Part Two)"
by Courtesy of Artificial Eye
Thursday 8th July 2004
Would you call AT FIVE IN THE AFTERNOON a realist film?
Godard says that cinema was invented to show reality but has become a means of entertainment. In this film, I tried as much as possible neither to entertain, nor to judge. In this respect, the fi... View article in full
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Article - "War Orphans 2: Stray Dogs"
by Graeme Hobbs
Tuesday 5th December 2006
In War Orphans 1: Turtles can Fly, I looked at Bahman Ghobadi’s film, set in and around a refugee camp in Iraqui Kurdistan, in which adults are peripheral to the action and children take the lead roles. Here, I want to consider Marziyeh Meshkini’s Stray Dog... View article in full
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This film is part of the following Film Collections
Including: A Ma Soeur, American Psycho, An Angel At My Table, Anatomy Of Hell, At Five In The Afternoon, Awakenings, Beau Travail, Beautiful Thing, Bend It Like Beckham, Better Than Chocolate.
Recommendations from fellow customers
by Jafar Panahi
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