VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
1260
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Una giovane madre iraniana e sua figlia di sei anni trovano rifugio in un centro di accoglienza per donne australiane per le due settimane del capodanno iraniano (Nowruz).Una giovane madre iraniana e sua figlia di sei anni trovano rifugio in un centro di accoglienza per donne australiane per le due settimane del capodanno iraniano (Nowruz).Una giovane madre iraniana e sua figlia di sei anni trovano rifugio in un centro di accoglienza per donne australiane per le due settimane del capodanno iraniano (Nowruz).
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 7 vittorie e 28 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
Premiered at Sundance, Shayda centers on an Iranian woman trying to preserve normalcy during Nowruz for her 6 year old daughter in Australia, while trying to escape the manipulations of her separated, abusive husband. Shayda immediately feels personal, and it is director/writer Noora Niasari telling the story of her own mother. While the movie centers on the mother, the daughter's own eyes and experience are brought to life. A brief sequence filmed from the child's perspective is particularly chilling. While this story is intimate and personal as a moment, it also feels timely as Iranian women today courageously protest and risk their lives for rights richly deserved. Performances are stellar by Zar Amir Ebrahimi and child actor Selina Zahednia.
Except it is not iranian drama. The whole iranian part is completely irrelevant. This is a movie about a woman running away from her abusive husband. They are both in australia and she cannot go back to iran because she has sinned (im paraphrasing) and nothing good awaits her from the morality police.
She and the kid take refuge in a shelter while trying to avoid her husband and sort her immigration paperwork. She is paranoid, feels he is stalking her etc etc. The usual. Nothing new in the script.
Where does the movie go astray here then.. Simply, the movie fails to create any meaningful care for the characters. I genuinely was rooting for the father here because shayda was so wooden so unlikable and just unmemorable. It did not resonate with me at all and the movie is based on emotion, without really giving you such. The mother daughter scenes were forced and felt awkward and the scenes with the father and his people failed to portray him as the evil person she was desperate to avoid.
Social workers were good, they fit and probably the highlight of this movie... Expected better here. Was left disappointed.
5\10 unlikable characters and badly written relationships.
She and the kid take refuge in a shelter while trying to avoid her husband and sort her immigration paperwork. She is paranoid, feels he is stalking her etc etc. The usual. Nothing new in the script.
Where does the movie go astray here then.. Simply, the movie fails to create any meaningful care for the characters. I genuinely was rooting for the father here because shayda was so wooden so unlikable and just unmemorable. It did not resonate with me at all and the movie is based on emotion, without really giving you such. The mother daughter scenes were forced and felt awkward and the scenes with the father and his people failed to portray him as the evil person she was desperate to avoid.
Social workers were good, they fit and probably the highlight of this movie... Expected better here. Was left disappointed.
5\10 unlikable characters and badly written relationships.
Sheida's Autumn" is a deeply disappointing film. The story is shallow and predictable, with no real twists or excitement. The characters lack depth and their motivations are unclear, making it hard to connect with them. The acting feels forced and unnatural, with no emotional impact. Despite these flaws, the film has won several awards, likely due to its portrayal of Iranian society through a Western lens, presenting women as victims and men as oppressive, reinforcing harmful stereotypes. It's not worth watching, offering no substance or meaningful storytelling.
And in my opinion, it doesn't deserve the recognition it has received.
And in my opinion, it doesn't deserve the recognition it has received.
Shayda and her six-year-old daughter, Mona, attempt to find their freedom and footing in the world after fleeing from Iran to Australia to escape Hossein, an abusive husband and father. Shayda and Mona live in a secret shelter for women as the divorce and visitation rights are worked out. Hossein doesn't give up easily though. He uses all the considerable powers at his disposal to lure the mother and daughter back. Tricks, false promises of change, violence, and threats are all on the table as Hossein journeys from Iran to bring the women back. He will lure Mona alone if needed.
Writer and director Noora Niasari, present at this Canadian premiere screening at the Toronto International Film Festival, draws upon her own childhood experiences to craft this heart-rending and captivating thriller. Zar Amir Ebrahimi (Shayda) won the Best Actress award at Cannes for last year's Holy Spider. As Shayda she plays a similar role as in Holy Spider; a lone woman fighting the might of an authoritarian and male-dominated society (if she tackles Australia, next she can battle Iran, LOL)! Again, Zar Amir Ebrahimi is spectacular.
I wish that Niasari was better able, through imagery and dialogue, to emphasize her themes of rebirth, the Persian new year, and the fires of joy and love that burn away pain, but the results are good enough. May we always recognize such scumbags as Hossein from the beginning so that we can avoid them before they sink their claws into us. The film helps us recognize them with their hollow promises and their disguised yet unempathetic nature.
Writer and director Noora Niasari, present at this Canadian premiere screening at the Toronto International Film Festival, draws upon her own childhood experiences to craft this heart-rending and captivating thriller. Zar Amir Ebrahimi (Shayda) won the Best Actress award at Cannes for last year's Holy Spider. As Shayda she plays a similar role as in Holy Spider; a lone woman fighting the might of an authoritarian and male-dominated society (if she tackles Australia, next she can battle Iran, LOL)! Again, Zar Amir Ebrahimi is spectacular.
I wish that Niasari was better able, through imagery and dialogue, to emphasize her themes of rebirth, the Persian new year, and the fires of joy and love that burn away pain, but the results are good enough. May we always recognize such scumbags as Hossein from the beginning so that we can avoid them before they sink their claws into us. The film helps us recognize them with their hollow promises and their disguised yet unempathetic nature.
Best performance by Selina Zahednia child actor. Premiered at Sundance, Shayda centers on an Iranian woman trying to preserve normalcy during Nowruz for her 6 year old daughter in Australia, while trying to escape the manipulations of her separated, abusive husband. Shayda immediately feels personal, and it is director/writer Noora Niasari telling the story of her own mother. While the movie centers on the mother, the daughter's own eyes and experience are brought to life. A brief sequence filmed from the child's perspective is particularly chilling. While this story is intimate and personal as a moment, it also feels timely as Iranian women today courageously protest and risk their lives for rights .
Lo sapevi?
- QuizOfficial submission of Australia for the 'Best International Feature Film' category of the 96th Academy Awards in 2024.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 61.694 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 9551 USD
- 3 mar 2024
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 311.801 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 57min(117 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
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