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Eccentric movie too full of in-jokes to be truly universal
Eccentric movie too full of in-jokes to be truly universal

Sydney Morning Herald

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Eccentric movie too full of in-jokes to be truly universal

UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE ★★½ (G) 89 minutes Selected cinemas from May 22 The idea of cinema as a universal language originally took root in the era of silent film, when it was hoped that this newly invented art form would allow communication across cultures as never before, perhaps even helping to bring about world peace. Universal Language, the eccentric second feature by Canadian director Matthew Rankin, renews this dream after its own fashion, unfolding in the hypothetical country that would be brought into existence if Canada and Iran were superimposed on each other. But Rankin's title can also be understood ironically, since the upshot is a film that almost any viewer, regardless of background, is liable to find disconcerting and alien. Rankin's interest in Iran is not a passing fancy. Most of the film's action takes place on the snowy streets of Winnipeg, but the majority of the dialogue is in Persian, with the rest in French (the screenplay was written with two Iranian collaborators, Ila Firouzabadi and Pirouz Nemati, who appear on camera). Special tribute is paid throughout to the most celebrated of all Iranian filmmakers, the late Abbas Kiarostami, whose hallmarks include long takes and extreme wide shots, the use of non-professional actors, including children, and outwardly trivial plots with multiple levels of meaning. One of several subplots here involves a couple of schoolgirls (Rojina Esmaeili and Saba Vahedyousefi) who happen upon a banknote frozen in ice – a premise reportedly taken from an anecdote told by Rankin's grandmother, but also an echo of the struggle to retrieve a banknote which falls down a drain at the climax of Jafar Panahi's The White Balloon, which Kiarostami scripted. Kiarostami's Where Is the Friend's House? is another touchstone, including in a subplot featuring Rankin himself as a government employee who returns home to Winnipeg in search of his mother.

Eccentric movie too full of in-jokes to be truly universal
Eccentric movie too full of in-jokes to be truly universal

The Age

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

Eccentric movie too full of in-jokes to be truly universal

UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE ★★½ (G) 89 minutes Selected cinemas from May 22 The idea of cinema as a universal language originally took root in the era of silent film, when it was hoped that this newly invented art form would allow communication across cultures as never before, perhaps even helping to bring about world peace. Universal Language, the eccentric second feature by Canadian director Matthew Rankin, renews this dream after its own fashion, unfolding in the hypothetical country that would be brought into existence if Canada and Iran were superimposed on each other. But Rankin's title can also be understood ironically, since the upshot is a film that almost any viewer, regardless of background, is liable to find disconcerting and alien. Rankin's interest in Iran is not a passing fancy. Most of the film's action takes place on the snowy streets of Winnipeg, but the majority of the dialogue is in Persian, with the rest in French (the screenplay was written with two Iranian collaborators, Ila Firouzabadi and Pirouz Nemati, who appear on camera). Special tribute is paid throughout to the most celebrated of all Iranian filmmakers, the late Abbas Kiarostami, whose hallmarks include long takes and extreme wide shots, the use of non-professional actors, including children, and outwardly trivial plots with multiple levels of meaning. One of several subplots here involves a couple of schoolgirls (Rojina Esmaeili and Saba Vahedyousefi) who happen upon a banknote frozen in ice – a premise reportedly taken from an anecdote told by Rankin's grandmother, but also an echo of the struggle to retrieve a banknote which falls down a drain at the climax of Jafar Panahi's The White Balloon, which Kiarostami scripted. Kiarostami's Where Is the Friend's House? is another touchstone, including in a subplot featuring Rankin himself as a government employee who returns home to Winnipeg in search of his mother.

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