The Corridor | |
Native Name: | |
Director: | Behrouz Shoeibi |
Producer: | Mahmoud Razavi |
Screenplay: | Ali Asghari |
Story: | Behrouz Shoeibi |
Starring: | Reza Attaran Hanieh Tavassoli Shahrokh Forutanian Afsaneh Chehreh Azad |
Music: | Behzad Abdi |
Cinematography: | Mehdi Jafari |
Editing: | Hamidreza Ghorbani |
Runtime: | 92 minutes |
Country: | Iran |
Language: | Persian |
Gross: | 220,300 USD[1] |
The Corridor (Persian: دهلیز; transliterated as: Dehliz) is a 2013 Iranian drama film directed by Behrouz Shoeibi. Reza Attaran and Hanieh Tavassoli play the leading roles. The film mainly deals with the Islamic concept of Qisas. This was Shoeibi's debut film. As he has been a director's assistant and an actor, he didn't have some technical problems other first film directors do. This was also one of rare performances of Reza Attaran, not in a comic role. Hanieh Tavassoli won the crystal simorgh for best actress in a leading role in 31st Fajr International Film Festival.
Shiva (Hanieh Tavassoli) is the family head and looks after her little son, Amir Ali (Mohammad Reza Shirkhanlou); a witty and playful boy, in the absence of her husband, Behzad (Reza Attaran) who has committed a manslaughter in a fight on a parking space with another man. Now he is in prison and waiting for his verdict. Amir Ali is a first grader and thinks his father is dead, but after visiting him in the prison he gets depressed.
Shiva visits the murdered man's brother-in-law everyday and asks him to talk to his family in order to get their approval to be paid the Blood money. The victim's twin sister is very persistent on doing the Equal retaliation and they can't get her satisfaction. Mr. Izadi (Shahrokh Foroutanian), the warden and his wife (Afsaneh Chehreh Azad) which is a social worker also try to help Behzad.
Meanwhile, the visits between Amir Ali and Behzad becomes more and more intimate after Behzad gives his son a wooden horse which he has made in prison. Behzad is a former English teacher and teaches one of the guards privately to make him ready for the entrance exams. Because of his good behavior, Behzad gets a three-day permission to go home. This out-of-prison visits improves Amir Ali's self-confidence and he becomes calmer and even his grades are better now.
Finally Izadi takes Amir Ali to the victim's house where his mother is speechless for five years because of her son's death. Amir Ali apologizes for his father's action in a childish way and makes the mother cry. But we don't know whether her response is to forgive or to execute Behzad.[2]