Desert Dancer (DVD REVIEW)
Desert
Dancer
DVD
Review by Kam Williams
Iranian Dancer Defies Sharia Law to Pursues His Passion in Fact-Based
Inspirational Drama
Afshin
Ghaffarian (Reece Ritchie) had the great misfortune of being born in
Iran in the wake of the Islamist coup d’etat of 1979 which meant he
was reared under a repressive religious regime which banned all the
arts, from painting to poetry to playing music. So, when little
Afshin began to exhibit an insatiable interest in dance as a
youngster, he was warned by his mother (Nazanin
Boniadi) that the activity was banned in
accordance with the dictates of the nation’s authoritarian
Ayatollah.
Nevertheless,
she enrolled her son in
the Saba Arts Academy, a fledgling studio secretly operating in the
shadows. Under the tutelage of Mr. Mehdi (Makram Khoury), Afshin
exhibited early promise while enjoying the freedom to express himself
creatively, at least until the fateful day the place was trashed by
morality
police enforcing of
Sharia law.
Fast-forward
a decade or so and we find the promising prodigy now attending the
University of Teheran but still holding fast to the impractical pipe
dream of becoming a professional dancer. Along with a few curious
classmates, he forms an underground company which proceeds to
practice regularly in an abandoned factory loft.
Elaheh
(Freida Pinto) is the only member of the modern dance club with any
formal training, having been surreptitiously schooled in technique
and choreography by a mother who’d been a prima ballerina prior to
the fall of the Shah. Against the ominous backdrop of the burgeoning,
student-led Green Revolution of 2009, Elaheh gradually forges the
motley crew into a concert-quality troupe.
But
between the tense political climate and the official state sanction
against public performances, it looks like the idea staging a concert
for an audience is out of the question. Thus unfolds Desert Dancer,
an uplifting, overcoming-the-odds drama, recounting the real-life
dilemma of defiant Afshin Ghaffarian and his equally-rebellious
comrades.
The
movie marks the absolutely splendid directorial debut of Richard
Raymond who has crafted a visually-engaging spectacular with a
compelling plotline leading to satisfying resolution. The story
seamlessly interweaves inspired dance sequences, organized resistance
and a little old-fashioned romance while touching on a litany of
themes like love, loyalty, friendship and betrayal.
A
must-see biopic poignantly illustrating the indomitability of the
human spirit, even in the most oppressive of circumstances.
Excellent
(4
stars)
Rated
PG-13 for
mature themes, violence and drug use
Running
time: 98 minutes
Distributor: Fox Home
Entertainment
DVD Extras: Desert
Dancer: In Conversation with Afshin Ghaffarian; The Rise of the
People; First Memories; and the theatrical trailer.
To
see a trailer for Desert
Dancer, visit:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZC3er0RuVw
To order
a copy of Desert Dancer on
DVD, visit:
No comments:
Post a Comment