The Tenants is a satirical comedy set in an Iranian apartment building, where the lives of the tenants are thrown into chaos due to a series of misfortunes. The film explores themes of modernity, corruption, and communal living, and is filled with satirical humor and ironic situations. The tenants, including a swindler, a government official, and a construction worker, navigate through a messy apartment, marital problems, and controversies, leading to explosive and comical moments.
Jafar Khan, son of a rich traditional family in Tehran, comes back to Iran after spending 8 years for studying in Europe, but he has changed completely to the extent that he cannot even speaks Farsi properly.
Hamoon is a drama film released in 1990. It tells the story of a man who is in a state of existential crisis and contemplates suicide. He aspires to be a writer and is unhappy with his life, which includes a suspicious husband, a troubled marriage, and a general dissatisfaction with his existence. The film explores themes of spirituality, nihilism, and the search for meaning.
Towards the end of the Shahanshah's reign, Sergeant Makvandi is assigned the commander of the gendarmerie station in a small town. A stern disciplinarian, Sergeant Makvandi tries to impose order at the station but, being as degenerate as his subordinates, he fails to re-store discipline. faced by rebellious crowds, he imposes martial law, but people outwit him by mailing to his address a forged letter which "promotes the sergeant and ends the curfew". Makvandi tries to intimidate a school teacher into writing a song which he wants the students to sing on the day his "promotion" comes into effect. But the teacher refuses to give in, for he and his students are preparing to sing a new song, the song of revolution.
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