Director is working on English-language version of Reliance Big Pictures' "Kites."
'Stoning of Soraya M.' Leads L.A. Debate on Iran Turmoil
The screening of an Iranian film at the Los Angeles Film Festival on Saturday became the occasion to debate the turmoil happening a half a world away, while serving as a timely reminder of the struggle for women's rights under Islamic regimes in the Middle East.
Based on a true story, "The Stoning of Soraya M." tells the tale of Soraya (Mozhan Marno), an innocent women entangled in an unhappy marriage who is falsely accused by her husband of having an affair with a man in their remote Iranian village.
Soraya's husband schemes with the town elders to make sure his wife is charged with the ultimate penalty - being stoned to death by the whole village. Her only hope and supporter is her Aunt Zahra (Academy Award nominee Shohreh Aghdashloo), who later boldly shares Soraya's story with a journalist passing through town.
In real life, that journalist was Paris-based Freidoune Sahebjam, whose book of the same name was the first to bring attention to the real Soraya, who was stoned and killed in 1986.
The film is at once profoundly powerful and deeply disturbing: the prolonged and graphic scene depicting stones being thrown at Soraya - bloodied and buried to her waist in sand - elicited audible sobs from the packed audience at the Mann Festival Theater.
"I've seen the real thing on tape and in comparison, the scene in the movie is nothing," said director Cyrus Nowrasteh, who sat alongside Aghdashloo and Iranian writer and scholar Reza Aslan on a panel moderated by "Kite Runner" author Khaled Hosseini immediately after the screening. "I just felt I had the responsibility to not water it down for the people who have died this way."
Shohreh Aghdashloo (pictured right), who received a standing ovation from the audience for her performance, said she immediately wanted to become a part of the film upon hearing about its subject matter because she had viewed an actual stoning on-tape years prior. She recalled the difficulty of shooting such an emotional scene - which took six days to film in its entirety.
"On the fourth or fifth day of filming the stoning scene, I had dust in my eyes, there were angry men stomping on the ground and everyone was chanting 'Allahu Akbar' ['God is great']. It became hard to tell what was reality and what was a dream," she said.
Reza Aslan explained that Islamic law has long struggled with stonings because they are not written about in the Koran. The culture has responded to this problem by making it nearly impossible to be convicted of adultery: one has to be caught during fornication by four men of "blameless integrity" who all witness the act at the same time.
"They've created these obstacles instead of legal scholars simply saying, 'this is absurd,'" Aslan said. "The issue at hand is really more about the way woman get treated - not religion, but women's rights. We're talking about cultural practices - not religion - because there is no such thing as religion separated from culture."
Meanwhile on Saturday, thousands of protesters filled the streets of Tehran, combatting police with tear gas and batons on the seventh day of post-election protests by those who believe President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's victory was rigged. Reports put the death toll at as high as 150, and CNN said that 19 were killed Saturday.
And in Westwood, demonstrators lined the streets on Saturday, wielding red, white and green flags to show their support for protests in Iran.
"This film is so connected to the extraordinary events occurring in Iran," Hosseini said. "The uprising has a lot more to it than Ahmadinejad. This is years of frustration from a sophisticated society of people finally breaking open."
"Whatever happens, Iran won't be the same after this," Aghdashloo said. "My friends inside the country are telling me this looks like the 1979 year of revolution. We're at the dawn of democracy with more transparency where it's dialogues coming out instead of monologues coming down."
Hosseini was brought to the festival as an artist in residence by LAFF's director, Rebecca Yeldham, and told he could screen any film of his choosing. He initially had reservations about "The Stoning" because he felt it might further promote negative stereotypes about Islam, but said he ultimately couldn't ignore the film's power.
"After I saw it, I felt like the breath had been knocked out of my chest and I kind of wanted to knock somebody out, too," he said. "The film is bold and not willing to sanitize the horrific truth."
"I'm hoping now that the information is out there that together we can end this barbaric form of punishment," Aghdashloo said. She advocated visiting the movie's website to pledge money and support towards stopping the brutal punishment.
But to really make change, Aslan believes the Middle East will have to further its social, economic and political development.
"We have to see what we can do to change the culture and situation, by promoting education," he said. "We have to do more than worry and complain. We can't just sit in a theater and mourn it."



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F. Lemuire Says
This film is a definitive must-see. It sheds light on an issue that has been long since needed a loud and vocal call to action. I highly recommend this film for anyone and everyone. Go see it!
Catherine Todd Says
Robert Derringer, thank you for your heart-felt and well-written review! Moved me almost to tears. Now I will have to see the film and find some way to help. God love you all. CT
Robert Derringer Says
A case of art reflecting life or vice versa?
Saw the movie Saturday in Westwood. Unbelievably powerful. And very DISTURBING. Women have often been at the forefront of asking for and making change in society. And Iranian women are at the front and center of the change in that country RIGHT NOW!!!! – and they are particularly strong, passionate, courageous and proud. Azar Nasifi says “My faith is with those women.” Mine TOO! The character of Zahra in Cyrus Nowrasteh's film is the embodiment of a fearless Iran -- demanding justice, and Shoreh Agdashloo (sp?) is a real symbol of the change that is possible in that country, (although her film says it so much better and probably more directly than she ever can).
The voices of women do matter. Freidoune Sanhejam (sp?) took one such voice to the world through his book THE STONING OF SORAYA M and i can't help but think that her voice continues to echo today on the streets of Westwood as well as in this AMAZING motion picture made by, for and about Iranians --
Pray for these brave men and women dying on the streets of Tehran even today! Show your support for the people of Iran by speaking out in favor of their demand for democracy, and by refusing to be silent wherever and whenever we see the voices of victims, being suppressed.
President Obama said on CNN that “The Iranian people are seeking to have their voices heard”. This is one film that you may want to close your eyes for-- but we can't close our ears to their cries for change. THE WORLD WILL KNOW!!!
Paula Perez (ivybelle1) Says
Hey guys! I went to this screening. Everyone needs to go read what I had to say about it here:
pmperez.wordpress.com
Elizabeth Bennett Says
AMPAS should be humiliated every day. Their pictures along side Neda (martyred 16 year old girl killed in Tehran).
The extra icing to these traitors is at the same time they were having tea, our soldiers were dying.
I want them to go and live in Iran.
Americans have had their fill of these elitist aging bored millionaires trying to sell their anti-American b.s.
John T. Simpson Says
I could not be happier that this film, and events today in Iran, are finally showing the world the kind of repressive theocratic thugocracy that is the Shiite extremist leadership of the Islamic Republic of Iran. FYI many of the regime's leaders, including Hashemi Rafsanjani and recent presidential candidate Mohsen Rezai, have outstanding Interpol warrants on them for their involvement in the worst terror attacks in Argentina's history back in 1994. Rezai, a former head the Revolutionary Guard Council, was there under diplomatic cover. Interpol issued a warrant for him as recently as May 22, right in the middle of his presidential campaign. How about that!
BTW Iran's stoning law was blasted by human rights groups for its cruelty, and not just the stoning itself. Article 104 of Iran's penal code specifies that the stones should not be so large as to kill right away, not so small you can't call them stones. That's meant to accomplish only one goal: to prolong and increase the suffering of the victim. Hell, the Nazis just killed! Those fascist Islamist sickos savor the pain of their victims.
I have been reporting on the regime's human rights horrorshow for years, most especially the savage pogrom against LGBTs. Just being queer can be a death sentence in Iran. Even bloggers aren't safe. One blogger paid with his life in Evin prison for insulting Khamenei and the Mad Mullah Guardian Council. That blogger died, by the way, while Roxana Saberi was still being held hostage there. I can only wonder if Roxana heard his tortured screams before the man's 'suicide,' of which there seems to an epidemic in Evin. Assisted suicide, no doubt.
All that said, if there is one group of individuals who deserve a brutal Soraya-like stoning (at least in a PR way), it is the Nine Stooges of AMPAS, who flew off for the Unfriendly Skies in late February for tea and finger cookie soirees with the very people ordinary Iranians are fighting and dying to oppose, and are now trying to whitewash that abortion of a trip as a Bob Hope and Big Crosby Road movie! Not on my watch!
You have no idea how humiliating and damaging that trip was to both we Americans and ordinary Iranians. If you have some time (the indictment's a long one) I just posted a wrap of it yesterday at Breitbart's Big Hollywood site, aptly titled "The Stoning Of Team Hollywood." Link below. It's a revolutionary statement by a lone screenwriter against the film industry's so-called leadership. But these are revolutionary times. Read it and tell me I'm wrong.
FREE IRAN! DEATH TO THE DICTATOR!
http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/jtsimpson/2009/06/19/the-stoning-of-te...
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