The Glass Agency Explained

The Glass Agency
Director:Ebrahim Hatamikia
Producer:Varahonar
Farabi Cinema Foundation
Starring:Parviz Parastui
Reza Kianian
Habib Rezaei
Bita Badran
Music:Majid Entezami
Cinematography:Aziz Saati
Editing:Hayedeh Safiyari
Runtime:114 minutes
Country:Iran
Language:Persian

The Glass Agency (Persian: آژانس شیشه‌ای) is a 1998 Iranian drama film written and directed by Ebrahim Hatamikia,[1] and one of his most successful works and one of the most popular and controversial films of post-revolutionary Iranian cinema.[2]

The Glass Agency is set in a travel agency where an armed veteran takes hostages after failing to raise enough money for his injured comrade to travel abroad for medical treatment. The film candidly reveals some of the major fault lines in Iranian society today. With its complex message of sympathy for the veterans and criticism of those who exploit their status for political purposes, the film has won praise from conservatives and reformists alike.[3]

Plot

Two veterans of Iran-Iraq war, Abbas and his wartime commander Kazem are the main protagonists of the film. Abbas comes to Tehran to seek medical treatment for a war injury. Kazem wants to help Abbas as the doctor recommends that he should go abroad for the operation. However, it is almost New Year's Eve, and arranging a flight becomes difficult. Kazem is suffering from hegemony which is seen in the postwar society. The problems they encounter make Kazem lose his temper, and he ends up taking a whole travel agency hostage.[4]

Cast

Reception

Accolades

At the 16th Fajr International Film Festival, The film won both Best Film and Audience Choice of Best Film, making it the first film in The history of cinema of Iran to win the latter. The Glass Agency also won nine Crystal Simorgh awards and a Diploma Honorary including:

and It was nominated in four other categories including:

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://www.varahonar.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=144&Itemid=136 Vara Honar Film Company - The Glass Agency
  2. Book: Naficy . Hamid . Hamid Naficy . A Social History of Iranian Cinema, Volume 4: The Globalizing Era, 1984–2010 . 2012 . . Durham . 9780822348665 . 28.
  3. News: York . Geoffrey . Iranian film a symbol of cultural thawing . . 13 March 1998 . 7.
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20080207173205/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/160540/The-Glass-Agency/overview Entry in New York Times Movie Section - The New York Times