Ballad of Tara (Beyzaie, 1979): Barbican Cinema, 3.30pm
This screening is part of the Masterpieces of the Iranian New Wave season at the Barbican curated by Ehsan Khoshbakht. You can find full details here.
Barbican introduction:
A seamless fusion of myth, symbolism, folklore and classical Persian literature, Bahram Beyzaie’s drama unfolds like a feminist re-telling of Akira Kurosawa’s samurai epics. Tara, a strong-willed widow, encounters an ancient warrior spirit in the forest near her village. The ghostly figure pursues her relentlessly, trying to steal a sword she inherited from her father. Finding himself in love in love with Tara, the warrior becomes barred from returning to the realm of the dead. The film’s completion coincided with the Iranian Revolution and the subsequent Islamist takeover, leading to its indefinite suppression. It was not its political allegory that troubled the authorities, so much as its vision of a woman both desired and in control of her fate — an image intolerable to the fanatics. The film is the first of Beyzaie’s works to be fully centred on a woman: a figure of almost ethereal presence, portrayed with unforgettable poise portrayed by Susan Taslimi.
Here (and above) is an extract.
