First look: An Iranian director takes on Western morality
Cannes: Oscar-winner Asghar Farhadi leaves Iran to make "The Past," a heartbreaking tale of modern marriage
Salon
CANNES, France — By leaving his native Iran (at least for now) and making what for all practical purposes is a French film, Oscar-winning director Asghar Farhadi may have given up the principal factor that made him interesting to the West. But those who admired Farhadi’s intense Tehran domestic drama “A Separation” – one of the key movies of this decade so far – will find the same intimate sensibility and the same finely-wrought shifts in perspective at work in “The Past,” which premiered here on Friday. It’s still too early at Cannes to start handicapping the Palme d’Or race, but this one’s sure to be a strong contender.
This time Farhadi’s camera is pointed not at the hypocrisies of life in the Islamic Republic but at the darker consequenes of easy-breezy serial monogamy in the secular West. It’s oddly bracing to have an artist come out of a society that we know he finds overly repressive, and immediately make a film that essentially accuses supposedly liberated Westerners of behaving like a bunch of spoiled children, and of poisoning the next generation with our reckless misbehavior. Mind you, “The Past” is a complex drama that can’t be boiled down to that one theme, and anyway the squabbling middle-class couple in “A Separation” inflicted plenty of damage on that adorably precocious preteen daughter of theirs. It’s not as if Farhadi is preaching either morality or religion. Islam played a role in “A Separation” mainly as a marker of class differentiation, and while several of the characters in “The Past” come from Muslim backgrounds, religion is never mentioned.
Furthermore, the morality-fable overtones of “The Past” – and especially the suggestion that parents aren’t doing their jobs – are echoed in several other Cannes films this year, stretching from the depraved Los Angeles of Sofia Coppola’s “The Bling Ring” to the corrupt China of Jia Zhangke’s “A Touch of Sin” to the devastated psyche of a Blackfoot Indian World War II vet in Arnaud Desplechin’s “Jimmy P.” It’s Family Values Week on the Riviera! Seriously though, speaking both as a critic and a parent, I’m glad to see serious film artists take up a question that’s often viewed as an untouchable right-wing talking point.