Atom Heart Mother (film) explained

Atom Heart Mother
Director:Ali Ahmadzadeh
Producer:Amir Seyedzadeh
Music:Sahand Mehdizadeh
Cinematography:Ashkan Ashkani
Editing:Ali Ahmadzadeh, Ehsan Vaseghi
Runtime:97 minutes
Country:Iran
Language:Persian

Atom Heart Mother (Persian: مادر قلب‌اتمی|italic=yes, translit. Madar-e ghalb atomi) is a 2013 produced[1] Iranian film that has been released at the Berlin Film Festival 2015.[2] It was a nominee at the 17th Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema, the LA Film Festival and the 2015 Odesa International Film Festival,[3] and screened at the 65th Berlin International Film Festival, the 16th San Diego Asian Film Festival and the Zurich Film Festival, but was only permitted for screening in Iran in 2017, after some modifications required by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance.[1]


Title

The title of the film is a reference to a song by Pink Floyd.[4]

Plot

The plot is set at the beginning days of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's "Subsidy Reform Plan",[5] and spans one single night.[1] Two friends, Arineh and Nobahar, cruise the streets of Tehran after leaving a party at Midnight. After meeting their friend, Kami, who is planning to immigrate from Iran, they cause a road accident. A mysterious stranger, Toofan, tells them he has settled the accident issue by paying off the other driver. Here the plot shifts from realistic to spooky and metaphysical, when Toofan keeps on re-appearing, talking about dead dictators, weapons of mass destruction and parallel worlds.

The director said about the movie, after its screening at the Berlin Festival:

Cast

[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 'Atomic Heart' on Screen After 4-Year Delay. 30 May 2017. Financial Tribune. 15 June 2018.
  2. Web site: Madare ghalb atomi | Atom Heart Mother.
  3. Web site: Atomic Heart Mother (2015) – Awards. IMDb. 16 June 2018.
  4. Web site: مادر قلب اتمی Atom heart mother. filcin.com. filcin.com فیلسین. fa. 2019-07-29.
  5. Web site: Film Review: 'Atom Heart Mother'. 4 March 2015. Variety magazine. 15 June 2018.