Tahmineh Milani

Tahmineh Milāni
Born Tahmineh Milāni
(1960-09-01) September 1, 1960
Tabriz, Iran
Occupation Film director, Screen writer, Film producer, Architect
Years active 1980–present
Spouse(s) Mohammad Nikbin[1]
Children Xhina
Relatives Ahmad Milani (father)[2]

Tahmineh Milāni (Persian: تهمینه میلانی, born 1 September 1960) is an Iranian film director, screenwriter, and producer. Milani was born 1960 in Tabriz, Iran.[3] She is the wife of the Iranian actor and producer Mohammad Nikbin.[4]

Early career

After graduating in architecture[3] from the University of Science and Technology in Tehran Iran in 1986, she apprenticed as a script girl and an assistant director following a screen workshop in 1979.[3][4]

Milani started her career as a movie director with Children of Divorce in 1989.

Career as a director

Feminist filmmaker[3] Milani is known for touching controversial and sensitive issues, including women's rights and the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

The majority of Milani's films involve brave women who suffer under oppressive regimes. Her early films resembled fables, such as her 1990 offering Efsanye-e Ah (The Legend of a Sigh) which featured a character who, after failing as an author, befriends her sigh of despair. The sigh goes on to teach her of women with much larger problems in the world, yet still remain happy. Two years later, in Dige Che Khabar (What Did You Do Again?), Milani told the story of a young girl with the power to change her family simply by talking to herself. Iranian censors fought against the film, instructing her to replace the female lead with a young boy instead. Hard-line conservatives accused Milani of encouraging women to revolt against the current system. She deflected the criticisms, insisting that the men were merely scared of seeing their own wives riot because of her films.

Milani has received admirations and prizes for her movies especially for Two Women and "The 5th Reaction".

In her later films, Milani adopted a more melodramatic style and focused more on gender issues and her female characters became the subject of intense oppression and discrimination.

The government charged Milani as an anti-revolutionary due to the storyline of her 2001 anti-revolutionary film Nimeh-e Pinhan (The Hidden Half),[3] which revolved around a leftist university student against the regime of Shah Mohammad Rezā Shāh Pahlavi. The film's primary love story also drew criticism, for its depiction of the main character's relationship with an elderly man. Despite receiving permission to produce the film from the reformist Khatami government, she was imprisoned in 2001.[3] A backlash from many world-famous directors including Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese caused the government to release her after two weeks, but official charges were never dropped.

Milani's 2005 film Unwanted Woman tells the story of a woman forced to cover up a journey with her friend because of a law that bans travel for unmarried couples. Vakonesh Panjom (The Fifth Reaction) is the story of a woman who leaves her wealth, home, and children after the death of her husband. The Fifth Reaction, released in 2003, is Tahmineh Milani’s seventh movie regarding women’s social position and rights in a patriarchal society. For example, in Vakonesh Panjom (The Fifth Reaction), Milani addresses the problems of sexism, social inequality and injustice, and mainly law’s ignoring women’s rights in child custody case, to awaken women and to inspire them to fight for their rights. While often exaggerated for cinema-goers, the films' topics draw clear parallels to life in a theocratic Iran.

Milani believes that Iran's most-pressing problem is an identity crisis, claiming that Iranian men and women lead double lives. Faced with public extremism, each is forced to adopt separate lifestyles for the home and the public eye.

In 2007, Milani announced that she was going to make an AIDS-focussed TV series for the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting with the title The Positive Pals Club.[5]

Her film Yeki Az Mā Do Nafar (One of Our Two) screened in Iranian halls in 2011. She wrote and directed the film Principles, which was criticized as stilted and preachy.[6]

In 2016, Milani presented an exhibition of photography at the Aryana Gallery in Tehran.[7]

Filmography (as a director)

See also

Awards and honors

References

  1. عکس / تهمینه میلانی و همسرش محمد نیک بین
  2. میلانی در سوگ پدر به میزبانی هنرمندان نشست/ از فرهادی تا حاتمی کیا و کیمیایی
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Tahmineh Milani - A renowned feminist filmmaker". Retrieved 23 February 2010.
  4. 1 2 Phillips, Richard (29 September 2006). "Iranian director Tahmineh Milani speaks with WSWS". World Socialist Web Site. International Committee of the Fourth International. Retrieved 23 February 2010.
  5. "Tahmineh Milani to try her hand at TV". Payvand's Iran News. 25 October 2007. Retrieved 23 February 2010.
  6. "Principles: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter, 10/22/2011 by Sura Wood
  7. "Filmmaker Tahmineh Milani tries her hand at photography". Tehran Times Sharareh Samei
  8. "Iranian Artists as Troublemakers". Pop Matters, Michael Barrett 6 May 2011
  9. 1 2 "Unwanted Woman". Tahmineh Milāni official website. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  10. 1 2 "The Fifth Reaction". Tahmineh Milāni official website. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  11. "The Hidden Half". Tahmineh Milāni official website. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  12. "Two Women". Tahmineh Milāni official website. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.