Acting
Solmaz Panahi is an Iranian actress and the daughter of acclaimed filmmaker Jafar Panahi. She has appeared in Iranian cinema, often associated with projects connected to contemporary social realism.
Featuring seven stories from seven auteurs from around the world, the film chronicles this unprecedented moment in time, and is a true love letter to the power of cinema and its storytellers.
Jafar Panahi sets out to find a Kurdish young woman with a golden voice that has been forbidden to sing by her family.
Various women struggle to function in the oppressively sexist society of contemporary Iran.
A hundred and fourteen famous Iranian theater and cinema actresses and a French star: mute spectators at a theatrical representation of Khosrow and Shirin, a Persian poem from the twelfth century, put on stage by Kiarostami. The development of the text -- long a favorite in Persia and the Middle East -- remains invisible to the viewer of the film, the whole story is told by the faces of the women watching the show.
A portrait of the Panahi family's matriarch as the pandemic makes it more difficult for intergenerational connection.