Mansour Jahani in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter: Airstrikes have directly hit the Iranian cinema industry’s infrastructure

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Mansour Jahani an independent and international cinema journalist, in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter: Airstrikes have directly hit the Iranian industry’s infrastructure. The headquarters of the Iranian House of Cinema, the largest independent film industry guild in Iran, was hit and partially destroyed. The historic Shokoufeh Cinema in Tehran was struck twice and remains closed.

The Hollywood Reporter wrote in a report titled “Two Months Into the War, Iran’s Film Community Feels Under Attack — and Left Behind”: With no end in sight to the ongoing war in Iran — both Iran and the U.S. this week seized ships trying to move through the Strait of Hormuz — the country’s filmmakers say they feel both “under attack” — from U.S. and Israeli bombing attacks that have inflicted widespread damage to civilian infrastructure — and “abandoned” by the international community.

Two weeks into the shaky, uncertain ceasefire, a form of normality has returned to the streets of Tehran. “Compared to the [first] days of war, there are crowds and hustle and bustle [again],” Iranian film journalist Mansour Jahani tells The Hollywood Reporter. “People are busy with their daily work [but] in meetings and conversations, they talk to each other [about] the latest events and developments of this destructive and illegal war.”

The disruption to the film sector has been immediate. Cinemas across the country closed for 18 days at the start of the war. While several have since reopened, screening a limited number of films, the Nowruz New Year period, a 13-day holiday from March 20, and typically the most important season for the local box office, was severely impacted. There’s been “a serious recession at the box office,” Jahani notes.

Airstrikes have also directly hit the Iranian industry’s infrastructure. The headquarters of the Iranian House of Cinema, the largest independent film industry guild in Iran, was hit and partially destroyed. The historic Shokoufeh Cinema in Tehran was struck twice and remains closed. As Jahani first reported, the home of the late Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami (Taste of Cherry, Certified Copy) was also damaged in air strikes, along with training centers, documentary facilities and film offices across the country.

Beyond cinema, Jahani points to the broader toll on the Iranian population of the ongoing war. “The homes of a number of actors, filmmakers, and 90,063 residential units of ordinary Iranians and civilians were also targeted and damaged,” he claims.

Earlier this month, two-time Oscar-winning Iranian director Asghar Farhadi (A Separation, The Salesman), whose new feature, Parallel Stories, will premiere in Competition in Cannes, urged global filmmakers to take a stand against the destruction of civilian infrastructure in Iran, calling on “artists and filmmakers everywhere in the world to be a voice in these critical days and hours, in any way possible, to stop the destructive aggression” of the U.S.-Israeli bombing, which he said has been “not just the destruction of buildings, but an attack on human life and dignity.” Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani (Paterson, About Elly) has issued similar appeals.

Inside Iran, Jahani says he sees no indication that the conflict is driving internal political change. “Regardless of their dissatisfaction [with the regime], the Iranian people [have] not welcomed foreign intervention as an opportunity to overthrow the government in their country,” he says. “Wars have always united the Iranian people.”

For more details:

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/politics-news/iran-film-community-feels-under-attack-and-left-behind-1236572982

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