Persepolis (film)

Persepolis
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Screenplay by
  • Marjane Satrapi
  • Vincent Paronnaud
Based onPersepolis
by Marjane Satrapi
Produced by
  • Xavier Rigault
  • Marc-Antoine Robert
Starring
Edited byStéphane Roche
Music byOlivier Bernet
Production
companies
Distributed byDiaphana Distribution (France)
Sony Pictures Classics (United States)
Release dates
  • 23 May 2007 (2007-05-23) (Cannes)
  • 27 June 2007 (2007-06-27) (France)
Running time
96 minutes[2]
Countries
  • France
  • United States[1]
Languages
  • French
  • English
  • Persian
  • German
Budget$7.3 million[3]
Box office$22.7 million[4]

Persepolis is a 2007 adult animated biographical drama film based upon Marjane Satrapi's autobiographical graphic novel of the same name.[5][6] It was written and directed by Satrapi in collaboration with Vincent Paronnaud.[7] The story follows a young girl as she comes of age against the backdrop of the Iranian Revolution. The title references the historical city of Persepolis. The film was an international co-production made by companies in France and Iran. It premiered at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, where it co-won the Jury Prize, alongside Silent Light.[8][9] It was released in France and Belgium on 27 June 2007, earning universal praise from critics. The film was selected as the French entry for the Best Foreign Language Film category at the 80th Academy Awards,[10] and was nominated for Best Animated Feature.[11][12]

Plot

At the Paris-Orly Airport in France, Marjane "Marji" Satrapi gets ready to board a plane to Tehran, but changes her mind at the last moment. She spends the whole day at the airport, reflecting on her life before her departure to France.

During the 1979 Iranian revolution against the Shah of Iran, Marji's middle-class family participates in the rallies, though she is forbidden from attending. Marji's uncle Anoosh comes to dinner upon release from prison, inspiring Marji with stories of his life on the run from the government. The Shah is deposed, and elections for a new leading power commence; Islamic fundamentalists win the elections and impose strict Islamic law, forcing women to dress "modestly" and wear headscarves. Anoosh is rearrested and executed for his political beliefs. Over time, many Iranians escape abroad.

The Iran–Iraq War breaks out and the Iranian government takes away even more social freedoms. Marji's uncle Taher suffers a heart attack and must go to England for surgery, but only those approved by the Board of Health can leave the country. When Marji's aunt seeks permission, she finds that the hospital director is her former window washer, who is incompetent and submissive to religion. Marji and her father visit Khosro for a fake passport. Khosro is sheltering Niloufar, a woman wanted for her Communist beliefs. When Niloufar is caught and executed, Khosro flees. Taher dies afterward.

As she grows up, Marji buys heavy metal music on the black market and wears Western clothing. When she rebuts a teacher's lies about government abuses, she is expelled. Fearing her arrest, her parents send her to a French lycée in Vienna to live with her mother's best friend. Marjane is later sent to live in a boarding house with Catholic nuns. Marji makes few friends and feels isolated. After she insults a nun, she is thrown out. She moves from house to house until she rents a room from Dr. Frau Schloss, a former teacher with an unstable personality.

One night, as she leaves a party where she lies about being French, Marji hears her grandmother's voice telling her to stay true to herself. She develops a relationship with Markus, but it ends after she catches him cheating on her with another woman. Schloss accuses Marji of stealing, and Marji leaves. She spends the day on a park bench, reflecting upon her actions and realizing she has nowhere to go. After living on the street for a few months, she contracts bronchitis and almost dies. She awakens in a Viennese hospital, where she is allowed to make a phone call home.

Marji returns to Iran with her family's hopes that the end of the war will improve their lives. She grows depressed, and attempts suicide by overdosing on medication. She dreams of meeting God, who insists that her time is not over. Jolted out of her depression, she attends university and starts dating fellow student Reza.

While waiting for Reza outside, Marji lies to a police officer to avoid arrest for wearing makeup, saying a man nearby who had been ogling her had made indecent comments about her. Her grandmother is disappointed and tells her that both her grandfather and her uncle died for freedom and that she should never sacrifice her integrity. Marji gives a speech during class, challenging the sexist double standard in the university's forum on public morality, but both Marji's and Reza's families are fined when the two are caught holding hands in public. Marji and Reza marry, but divorce a year later.

The fundamentalist police raid a party that Marji is attending. The women are detained while the men escape across the rooftops. One of them, Nima, falls to his death. Marji decides to leave Iran. Before leaving, she visits the graves of her grandfather and uncle. Her mother forbids her from returning, and her grandmother dies soon after her departure.

In the present, at Orly, Marji gets into a taxi. As it leaves the airport, the driver asks where she is coming from. She replies, "Iran". She recalls her final memory of her grandmother.

Cast

French version
English version

Production

Cinematography

The film is presented in the black-and-white style of the original graphic novels. Satrapi explains in a bonus feature on the DVD that this was so that the place and the characters would not look like foreigners in a foreign country but simply people in a country to show how easily a country can become like Iran. The present-day scenes are shown in color, while sections of the historic narrative resemble a shadow theater show. The design was created by art director and executive producer Marc Jousset. The animation is credited to the Perseprod studio and was created by two specialized studios, Je Suis Bien Content and Pumpkin 3D.

Animation and design

Written and directed by Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud, the film was produced by 20 animators. Initially opposed to producing an animated movie due to the high level of difficulty, producers Marc-Antoine Robert and Xavier Regault gave protagonist Satrapi various options to avoid animation. Robert said: "I know the new generation of French comic book artists quite well, and I'm afraid of Marjane's. I offered to write an original script for her, because I didn't want to work on an animated movie at all...I knew how complicated it was".[13] In the end, the producers followed Satrapi's wishes and focused on interpreting her life story as depicted in her novel Persepolis. "With live-action, it would have turned into a story of people living in a distant land who don't look like us," Satrapi said. "At best, it would have been an exotic story, and at worst, a 'third-world' story".[13]

The animation team worked alongside Satrapi to gain a detailed understanding of the types of graphic images she deemed necessary for accuracy. Following her guidelines, the animators, such as Marc Jousset, commented on their use of the "tradition animation techniques" Satrapi requested to keep the drawings simple and avoid the "more high-tech techniques" that "would look dated".[14] Satrapi's vision, according to Jousset, involved a lot of focus on the characters' natural, humane physical imperfections.

During their initial stages of production, the animation team attempted to use 2D image techniques "on pen tablets", but were immediately unsatisfied with the product due to the lack of definition, Jousset has said.[14] Applying traditional techniques as simple as paper and ink to the production allowed Satrapi to use methods she was familiar with. As a result, Satrapi crafted a depiction she recognized as her own work, and thus her own story.[14]

Satrapi, along with the director and animation team, deliberately chose black and white as the film's dominant colors to continue on the path of traditional animation techniques. Despite its simplicity, members of the animation team such as Jousset discussed how black and white makes imperfections more obvious: "Using only black and white in an animation movie requires a great deal of discipline. From a technical point of view, you can't make any mistakes...it shows up straight away on the large screen".[14] In addition to color display, the animation team worked especially hard on techniques that mimicked the styles of Japanese cartoonists, known as manga, and translating them into their own craft of "a specific style, both realistic and mature. No bluffing, no tricks, nothing overcooked".[14] According to Jousset, "Marjane had quite an unusual way of working...Marjane insisted on being filmed playing out all the scenes...it was a great source of information for the animators, giving them an accurate approach to how they should work".[14] With this in mind, the animators commented on the immense hardships they faced when creating each image of "1,200 shots" through Satrapi's perspective because even though "Marjane's drawings looked very simple and graphic...they're very difficult to work on because there are so few identifying marks. Realistic drawings require outstanding accuracy".[14] But despite the difficulties in working with animation, Satrapi's determination to make the film motivated the animators to finish each graphic image with full accuracy. Following alongside a more traditional style of graphic imagery was not only difficult in terms of drawing, but also in terms of locating a team to draw the images since traditional animators "hardly exist in France anymore".[14] With a group of more than 100 people, though, animator Pascal Chevé confirmed the variety of style each team member brought to the table: "An animator will be more focused on trying to make the character move in the right way. Assistant animators will then put the final touches to the drawings to make sure they're true to the original. Then the 'trace' team comes in, and they work on each drawing with...a felt pen, to ensure that they are consistent with the line that runs throughout the movie".[14]

Although it was hard to craft realistic cartoon drawings, Jousset said the biggest challenge was staying on schedule and within budget of "6 million Euros, which is reasonable for a 2D movie made in France",[14] but that "I think the culmination of the fact that it was a true story, that the main character worked with you, that an animated movie dealt with a current issue and that it was intended for adults was tremendously exciting for the team".[14]

Release

The film premiered at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival on 23 May 2007, where it co-won the Jury Prize, alongside Silent Light.[8] In her acceptance speech, Satrapi said, "Although this film is universal, I wish to dedicate the prize to all Iranians."[15]

Reception

Writer-director Marjane Satrapi at the premiere of Persepolis.

Critical response

A poster for Persepolis at a tram stop in Warsaw, Poland. Photograph by Ivonna Nowicka

Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 96% based on 163 reviews, with an average rating of 8.20/10. The site's consensus reads: "Persepolis is an emotionally powerful, dramatically enthralling autobiographical gem, and the film's simple black-and-white images are effective and bold".[16] Metacritic gives the film a weighted average score of 90 out of 100 based on 31 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[17]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four stars out of four, writing that although its black and white animation "may sound Spartan", it is "surprisingly involving" and that Satrapi's story is told "caringly, lovingly and with great style". He added, "while so many films about coming of age involve manufactured dilemmas, here is one about a woman who indeed does come of age, and magnificently."[18]

Time magazine's Richard Corliss named the film one of the Top 10 Movies of 2007, ranking it #6, and called it "a coming-of-age tale that manages to be both harrowing and exuberant".[19]

It has been ranked No. 58 in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema" in 2010.[20]

International government reaction

The film has drawn complaints from the Iranian government. Even before its debut at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, the government-connected Iran Farabi Foundation sent a letter to the French embassy in Tehran reading, "This year the Cannes Film Festival, in an unconventional and unsuitable act, has chosen a movie about Iran that has presented an unrealistic face of the achievements and results of the glorious Islamic Revolution in some of its parts."[21] Despite such objections, the Iranian cultural authorities relented in February 2008 and allowed limited screenings of the film in Tehran, albeit with six scenes censored due to sexual content.[22]

In June 2007 in Thailand, the film was dropped from the lineup of the Bangkok International Film Festival. Festival director Chattan Kunjara na Ayudhya said, "I was invited by the Iranian embassy to discuss the matter and we both came to mutual agreement that it would be beneficial to both countries if the film was not shown" and "It is a good movie in artistic terms, but we have to consider other issues that might arise here."[23]

Persepolis was initially banned in Lebanon after some clerics found it "offensive to Iran and Islam." The ban was later revoked after an outcry in Lebanese intellectual and political circles.[24]

Screening controversies

On 7 October 2011, the film was shown on the Tunisian private television station Nessma. A day later a demonstration formed and marched on the station. The main Islamic party in Tunisia, Ennahda, condemned the demonstration.[25] Nabil Karoui, the owner of Nessma TV, faced trial in Tunis on charges of "violating sacred values" and "disturbing the public order." He was found guilty and ordered to pay a fine of 2,400 dinars ($1,700; £1,000), a much more lenient punishment than predicted.[26] Amnesty International said that criminal proceedings against Karoui are an affront to freedom of expression.[27]

Awards

80th Academy Awards
65th Golden Globe Awards
62nd British Academy Film Awards
35th Annie Awards
33rd César Awards
2007 Cannes Film Festival[8]
20th European Film Awards
3rd Globes de Cristal Award
  • Won: Best Film
2007 London Film Festival
  • Southerland Trophy (Grand prize of the festival)
2007 Cinemanila International Film Festival
  • Special Jury Prize
2007 São Paulo International Film Festival
  • Won: Best Foreign Language Film
2007 Vancouver International Film Festival
  • Won: Rogers People's Choice Award for Most Popular International Film
2009 Silver Condor Awards

See also

References

  1. ^ "PERSEPOLIS (2007)". Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  2. ^ "Persepolis". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  3. ^ France takes art toons seriously – Variety
  4. ^ "Persepolis (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  5. ^ Best Indie Animated Movies of All Time|Collider
  6. ^ 22 Animated Cult Classics Worth Checking Out – MovieWeb
  7. ^ a b Persepolis at The Big Cartoon DataBase
  8. ^ a b c "Festival de Cannes: Persepolis". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  9. ^ "List of Cannes Film Festival winners". Associated Press. 27 May 2007. Archived from the original on 24 October 2020. Retrieved 27 May 2007.
  10. ^ A. Grove, Martin (19 December 2007). "'Persepolis' has shot at animated, foreign film Oscars". The Hollywood Reporter.
  11. ^ Brad Bird winning for "Ratatouille" - Oscars on YouTube
  12. ^ 2008|Oscars.org
  13. ^ a b Janet Hetherington (21 December 2007). "'Persepolis' in Motion". Animation World Network. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Film Education" (PDF). filmeducation.org. 2008. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  15. ^ Persepolis Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine on the official site of the Cannes Film Festival
  16. ^ "Persepolis (2007)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  17. ^ "Persepolis (2007): Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  18. ^ Persepolis movie review and film summary (Roger Ebert), retrieved 25 June 2021
  19. ^ Corliss, Richard (24 December 2007). "The 10 Best Movies". Time. p. 40. Archived from the original on 12 December 2007.
  20. ^ "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema | 58. Persepolis". Empire.
  21. ^ "Iran protests screening of movie at Cannes Film Festival". International Herald Tribune. Associated Press. 20 May 2007. Retrieved 28 March 2009.
  22. ^ "Rare Iran screening for controversial film 'Persepolis'". Agence France-Presse. 14 February 2008. Archived from the original on 22 May 2008.
  23. ^ "Thailand pulls Iranian cartoon from film festival". Reuters. 27 June 2007.
  24. ^ "LEBANON: Iran revolution film 'Persepolis' unbanned". Los Angeles Times. 28 March 2008.
  25. ^ "Protesters attack TV station over film Persepolis". BBC News. 9 October 2011.
  26. ^ "Tunisia fines TV channel owner over controversial film". BBC News. 3 May 2012.
  27. ^ Minovitz, Ethan (23 January 2012). "Tunisia urged to drop charges over 'Persepolis'". Big Cartoon News. Archived from the original on 16 December 2012. Retrieved 23 January 2012.

Further reading

External links