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Woman and Child

Woman and Child

Time Out22-05-2025
Iranian cinema is your go-to for knotty, complex morality tales. Small missteps are made, a series of seemingly inconsequential events leads to one big, defining one – and the fallout leaves characters trying to navigate the awful repercussions often made worse by the country's suffocating social and religious codes. A gun goes missing in Mohammad Rasoulof's The Seed of the Sacred Fig; a handbag is stolen in Asghar Farhadi's A Hero. Torment and tragedies ensue.
In Saeed Roustayi's Woman and Child, a carefully crafted and endlessly gripping drama that follows a Tehran family's slow disintegration, it's the supposedly joyous occasion of a marriage proposal that set the wheels of fate in motion.
Hard-working nurse Mahnaz (Parinaz Izadyar, magnetic) is a 40-year-old widow with two kids: teenage tearaway Aliyar (Sinan Mohebi) and all-round poppet Neda (Arshida Dorostkar). She's dating ambulance driver Hamid (A Separation 's Payman Maadi), an older man whose flirtations suddenly turn serious. He pops the question, but there's an immediate string attached: will she pretend she's childless when his strict rural parents come to visit them at her house?
For anyone unfamiliar with the strictures and mores of Iranian society, the answer would be 'hell no'. But as Roustayi shows in a movie that's sympathetic to its female protagonist almost to a fault, it's nothing like that simple. As a single mum, Hamid might be her best bet – even if he immediately scans as something of a rogue and she's happy to tick along without formalising things. So she cedes to his request, dutifully taking down the portraits of her kids on her apartment walls, and endures the pretence with grace as her own mother (Fereshteh Sadr Orafaee) sits in.
And so the first domino falls in a series of connected events that will leave her broken up and grief-stricken. She's pushed her kids onto her reluctant father-in-law for the visit. He's a wheezing misanthrope played with raw unlikeability by Hassan Pourshirazi, and perhaps inevitably, something terrible happens. For Mahnaz, sadness and regret are not enough. She sets off on a quest for justice for those she blames for the tragedy: neglectful granddad; the teacher she believes had victimised her son; Hamid, who, to compound matters, had decided that he wanted to marry her sister anyway.
The outstanding actress toggles from open-hearted to incandescent with total believability
The storytelling is enthralling but not flawless. It's not entirely clear why Mahnaz's sister would fall for the slimy imprecations of a man who has just ditched her own sibling, especially when their formidable, matter-of-fact mother is enraged by the idea. And an overheated final stretch, in which Mahnaz goes full black widow, overheats a film that works best when it's simmering slowly. The question of her own responsibility in what transpired is glossed over.
But Woman and Child, the third part in Roustayi's trilogy about Iranian women (2016's Life and a Day, 2022's Leila's Brothers), manages to be both incredibly tense and deeply stirring in its depiction of a woman coping with unimaginable pain. And in the outstanding Izadyar, who toggles from open-hearted to incandescent with total believability, he's found the perfect collaborator to bring down the curtain on his feminist triptych.
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London's best cheap eats, according to TikTok foodie Sama Ansari Pour
London's best cheap eats, according to TikTok foodie Sama Ansari Pour

Time Out

timea day ago

  • Time Out

London's best cheap eats, according to TikTok foodie Sama Ansari Pour

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Why Sama loves it: Because you can order a £4.50 lahmacun and get four to five free starters, as well as free tea, and often free rice pudding as well. It's typical for Turkish restaurants to provide starters for free, but a lot of Turkish restaurants in the city are phasing this out. Not Enfes Ocakbasi. In my experience, no matter what you order, you'll be served hot bread, hummus, cacik, grilled onions and two types of salad. The lahmacun is made fresh and loaded with flavourful meat. It's hard to get a better deal. Sama's tip: Put the salad in the lahmacun, squeeze lemon on it and make it into a big wrap – that's the authentic Turkish way to eat it. Address: 485-487 Green Lanes, Harringay Ladder, N4 1AJ. Opening hours: 11am-12am, Monday to Friday, 11am-1am on the weekends. Expect to pay: Lahmacun costs £4.50. Sama Ansari Pour 3. Salteńas Martin, Old Kent Road What is it? A Bolivian cafe serving excellent empanadas. 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I found out my rich husband got another woman pregnant at the same time as me – so I blew £150k in Harrods revenge spree
I found out my rich husband got another woman pregnant at the same time as me – so I blew £150k in Harrods revenge spree

Scottish Sun

timea day ago

  • Scottish Sun

I found out my rich husband got another woman pregnant at the same time as me – so I blew £150k in Harrods revenge spree

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Real Housewives Of London: Meet Panthea Parker
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Graziadaily

time3 days ago

  • Graziadaily

Real Housewives Of London: Meet Panthea Parker

The long-awaited Real Housewives of London is finally here – and brand new housewife Panthea Parker is certainly spilling the tea... The outspoken socialise brought the fire in episode one, clashing with fellow housewife Juliet Mayhew. Coming in hot, Panthea didn't hold back when she spotted the Aussie-born star at Amanda Cronin's women's day party - leaving the event early after a shouting match ensued. If episode one is anything to go by, this is hardly the last we'll hear from Panthea. Opening up about her fiery entrance, she told Grazia, 'Panthea doesn't have a filter! I don't think before I speak.' Here's everything to know about RHOL's fieriest recruit, Panthea Parker. Panthea Parker is a British-Iranian socialite, who has joined the cast of Real Housewives of London . The 50-year-old star told Grazia that it took her 'about three weeks' before signing up to the show, explaining, 'I was like, "That was me 15 years ago, you've come 15 years too late!" The more I said no, the more I think [the producers] wanted me.' ©for Hayu Born to Iranian parents, Panthea moved to England at the age of four. She grew up in the ever-so-gorgeous area of Hampstead, London, an area loved by celebs. Opening up about her childhood, Panthea shared, 'I grew up in Hampstead. I went to private school and summer camps in Switzerland. My parents were very affluent people in Iran before they moved were during the revolution.' Now, she calls North London home. Panthea doesn't work, having revealed during an interview, 'I've been privileged enough never having to work, and then I got married to someone who was very wealthy, who bought me Chanel and flew me on Concorde back in the day.' Of course, not having a job doesn't mean Panthea doesn't do anything. It's hard work schmoozing around London's finest. The socialite has been part of the Mayfair social scene since the 1990s, and is known for her exclusive high-society connections. She was known for being a fixture at Annabel's back in the day, and has even rubbed shoulders with Jennifer Lopez. Panthea revealed in an Instagram post how she met in India, when the 'On The Floor' singing was performing at a wedding. Panthea wrote, 'When your BFF casually has perform at his wedding in India. Yes, I apparently looking like I could sing, so she came up to me - little did she know my voice is questionable at best.' When it comes to friends, we can't say how deep their post-wedding relationship ran... But not everyone can say they've shared a stage with So, who is the man who's been buying Panthea Chancel bags and flying her on Concorde? Top London lawyer Ed Parker, of course. According to Google, Ed is a prominent London lawyer who specialises in derivatives and structured products. A partner at Mayer Brown, he leads the firm's Banking & Finance practise in London. Panthea shares three young children with lawyer Ed. She recently hit headlines for taking her daughter Sienna, 10, to Brighton Pride – despite some warning that the event wasn't suitable for children. Hitting back at online trolls, Panthea said, 'The Pride we experienced wasn't wild nightlife – it was bright flags, beautiful families, smiles and balloons. It was safe, inclusive and deeply loving. People forget that Pride isn't just for adults – it's for everyone who believes in kindness.' Panthea is also mum to an adult son from a previous marriage. Despite having one of the most high-profile friendship groups, socialite Panthea surprisingly wasn't too close with her fellow housewives. Admitting she's partial to an online deep dive, Panthea says, 'I went through Instagrams. There were ties. There's so many people in the social circles that I knew people peripherally. You're not friends with them, but you know them. I've met them and parties and stuff, so it's not too distant.' Oh, but she does share a hairdresser with Juliet Angus. Follow @thepantheaparker for plenty of selfies, travel, and private jet content. Charlotte Roberts is a news and entertainment writer at Grazia UK. She spends her days covering everything celebrity and pop culture.

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