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The Color of Paradise

The Color of Paradise

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $26.96
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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: When bad things happen to good people...
Review: For a child whom perhaps Life forgot, this film had me frozen to the seat, not moving, listening intently, trying not to breathe. The theme of a blind child groping for his place(so to speak)whilst having the weight of thistledown for his father, brings the story to a conflict of selfishness and struggle. For me, the sound made the film. The sounds were acute and precise, a fascinating parallel between Muhummad's vision impairment and his connection with his surroundings. Using the woodpecker as a morse code-esque symbol was a beautiful touch. Perhaps, the only unnerving part of the film was it's dramatic and in my view uncalled for finale involving the horse. The subtitles in their Middle Eastern text would also make it very difficult for Western animal welfare organisations to complain! A masterpiece of sound from Iran.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Antidote to Hollywooden Movies
Review: This movie should be required viewing for Americans...many of us so complacent as to think we have little to learn from a culture as "underdeveloped" as Iran. In reality, we have much to learn from people less spoiled than ourselves. The most poignant edge of this powerful movie was watching a young blind child teach spirituality to everyone he touched.

The movie is beautifully shot, rich in depth and color, perfectly cast, and uses only the special effects that each of us has within our minds and hearts.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: good
Review: good movie

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazing
Review: This was one of the biggest suprises. It looked interesting, but I didn't expect to be so touched. I'll never forget this film.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What a performance...
Review: Many of the reviews here have already addressed many of the sentiments I had about this film and the beautiful manner in which it was filmed, so I won't comment further on those issues...

My only add on was a personal comment that while watching the scene at the pond, I found tears running uncontrollably from my eyes...It is very rare for me to experience so much emotion from any film, so my reaction is certainly a wonderful testament to what a gloriously touching movie has been created here...

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Ethenic ... Movie
Review: You wouldn't like it had been produced in the States, not even a black-white one from the classic era.

But that may be the very reason so many people seem to enjoy it. Like popular ethenic food, it appeals to the common sensibilities in all peoples and transcends the contemporary struggles within a particular society. As an example, although African aborigines may fancy insects or Cantonese find canid delicacies, it is always the beef or lamb or poultry that gets universal attention.

The trick is in the spice. Bourgeoisie in a post-industrial nation may very well find relationships among an agrarian family members, one of whom being blind and so vulnerable, stimulating. Whether it truely bridges the art and the subject is at the subject's mercy. If one is in the mood to have a western-afro-style-lamp-casserole with salard and chardonnay for dinner tonight, this is a pretty good visual counterpart.

Artistically, I really have some reservations about the lighting, scripting and videography of the film. Many segements are spectacular, colorful and memorable, but the film doesn't give you the same impression as a whole. I am not much in filming techniques though.

If one is really adventurous, I'd recommand the title: "Not One Less". Not necessarily for its artistic presentation per se. That movie is more original, IMHO, and has a more consistent style (even though as rough as an unedited documentary). Enjoy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very touching movie
Review: Just the title say it all. It it is a beautyfull film. Just when I touht that I seen it all, This film came a long with this blind boy that just brakes your heart.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautiful, Haunting, Life-Changing
Review: This beautifully and sensitively filmed picture, with a stunning economy of the spoken word, tells a powerful story that - if you are open to it - will change you. Each actor's performance is a tour de force. Unforgettable! Finally, the provocative ending will force you to take the movie's message with you long after the credits by challenging you to contemplate what happened and, even more importantly, why? Please DO NOT MISS THIS GEM!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Compassionate Paradise of Color and Sound
Review: You may find it difficult to rent a quiet, deceptively simple film about a few months in the life of a blind boy-but overcome your resistance and treat yourself to one of the finest films of the year.. A gem. And one of the most beautiful looking films you'll ever see. The cinematography is simply spectacular. The story deeply moving and unforgettable. And yes you'll most likely have to read subtitles (though not that many) unless you speak Farsi.

Although I'm aware the film teeters dangerously close to Spielberg-ian heartstring pulling manipulation, it's also powerful, uncompromising and a film that gets all of its details exactly right.

We meet Mohammad (Mohsen Ramezani) at the school for the blind in Tehran where he resides. We see the students leading each other around, learning how to read and write in Braille, and packing up to meet their parents as the school prepares to close for three months. Mohammad's father is very late. All the other children have been picked up by their parents. The teacher remains positive that the father will arrive to pick Mohammed up. We aren't so sure.

Mohammad gets up off the bench, and wanders off the path, over to a tree. He kneels down and at first it appears he is going to dig a hole in the dirt. But he continues to move the leaves around with his hands. We aren't sure what he is doing. Then he finds the tiny bird that has fallen from it's nest. We watch in amazement as he carefully picks the tiny bird up, and then proceeds to climb the tree and put the bird back into its nest. Mohammed we realize is a very special, gifted and sensitive 8 year old boy who just happens to be blind.

Director Majid Majidi finds a wonderful way to let us quickly stop pitying the blind child and come to admire and perhaps understand the character. Several times throughout the film we hear noises, before we see what the source of the noise is. We get close-ups of Mohammed's hand as he feels a creek bed for some stones, or plays with some wheat and begins quietly muttering some letters from the alphabet. He reads with his fingers and memorizes his lessons anyway he can. He has never stopped trying to learn, trying to less of a burden and embarrassment to his father.

Mohammad's father (Hossein Mahjub) reluctantly picks up his son at the school. We learn his wife has died and they will travel to the north where Mohammed's two young sisters and Grandmother live. Mohammed is loved and accepted as a whole person by everyone but his father. His father hopes to get married and sees his son as a weight that drags him down. He feels life had treated him unfairly by giving him a blind son to take care of and by taking his wife away from him. He is trying to win the hand of a women in the village and has been working very hard to raise the dowry and present the gifts necessary to get her hand in marriage. When asked he talks about his two daughters but does not mention his blind son. Perhaps his blind son would be seen a negative omen by his future father-in-law and so he must deny his very existence.

Mohammed is full of life and has a strong connection, even a spiritual connection to everything that surrounds him. He has been told that he is a special person because God particularly loves the blind and since God is invisible and can only be felt, it will be the blind who will feel him first. Mohammed the young boy wants desperately to believe that but as he comes to realize that his father views him as a burden, he begins to doubt the truth of what he has been told.

The camera lovingly braces the lush country side of the North Country of Iran. We see the beauty that Mohammed can only see and feel. We get a sense of what it must be like for him to put his overly sensitive fingers into the creek, to feel the Caspian Sea on his feet, to have a butterfly tickle his skin, to hear the birds and animals around him. To know his younger sister has gotten older by touching her face and declaring. . "My you have grown!" And while the camera takes the time to linger on certain shots it does not linger too long. The film almost always remains positive, almost always shows us the good of things.

Almost.

While his father is almost deathly afraid of certain sounds, Mohammed remains curious and calm with everything that is around him. He is full of life, wonder and love in contrast to being full of fear, anger and bitterness.

Majidi has created a ninety minute work which is rich with visual and emotional textures that will stay with you long after the film is over. Much of the film, because of its subject matter has a sadness to it. But like Mohammed the film sees beauty and richness everywhere and reminds us there is much we take for granted-like the beauty and compassion a young blind boy easily 'sees' and accepts.

NOTE: The film's Farsi title actually translates to The Color of God but the film has been re-titled in English: The Color of Paradise.

Chris Jarmick, Author of The Glass Cocoon with Serena F. Holder....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautiful Gift
Review: This sensitive film is a beautiful gift from God. You can keep your average American film, with all its arrogance, special effects, violence, erotica, and shallowness. "The Color of Paradise" is a simple story that pierces the heart. It is visual poetry. I cried, not because of sadness, but because of beauty. Bless the one who made this movie. May he go on to tell more stories.


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