My Mirror column:
Two Iranian films - Jafar Panahi's 2015 Taxi Tehran and
Abbas Kiarostami's 2002 Ten - use the taxi ride as a space for
confession, comment and confrontation.
Early in Jafar Panahi’s 2015 Iranian docufiction Taxi Tehran, two
passengers in a taxi get into an argument about the death penalty. “If
they hang two people, the others would see,” says the man in favour. The
woman argues against, saying that people mustn’t be hanged for such
minor crimes committed out of need. “After China, we have the most
executions in the world,” she points out. The more coherently the woman
argues, though, the more rudely the man jeers at her. “You don't know
jackshit,” he says at one point, accusing her of living in a world of
fiction because she is a teacher – someone who he thinks reads too many
books and spends her days with children.
Children
in post-revolutionary Iranian cinema, of course, have been the chosen
carriers of filmic truth – especially in Panahi’s own film career, right
from his 1995 debut The White Balloon and his 1997 feature The
Mirror (which shares with Taxi Tehran the docufiction device of having
an actor engage in conversations with real people). Taxi Tehran also
contains a precociously sharp child – the director’s niece, who films
everything on her mobile camera. Between showing us the articulate
female passenger and the whipsmart little girl, it’s more than clear
that Panahi intends us to laugh at the man’s words.
But
the car is, in Taxi Tehran, very much a space of dialogue; a place
where unusual exchanges can take place. Taxi Tehran was the third film
Panahi shot illegally after the Iranian state banned him from making
films, and it won him the Silver Bear at the 2015 Berlin Film Festival.
In the film Panahi turns his vehicle into a faux-taxi, picking up
strangers, family members and acquaintances from all over the city and
dropping them off at their destinations. Except we learn soon enough
that some of these exchanges are staged – and in the finest Panahi
tradition, it’s often difficult to say which ones.
The
film is strewn with references to the ubiquity of the camera
in our lives. From the niece who wants to make a film in a month and has
already recorded a real-life crisis in the lives of some acquaintances,
to the neighbour who brings Panahi footage from a security camera to
describe something terrible that happened to him, to the state placing a
political prisoner's visiting mother in a room with cameras, life seems
increasingly something that unfolds on screen rather than off it.
But Taxi
Tehran feels like an update on an older Iranian film which was
also set entirely inside a car driven by one person – Abbas
Kiarostami's Ten (2002). In the unforgettable first segment of that Palm d'Or-nominated film, a young boy shouts at his divorced mother for a
long length of time as she drives him through the city. We don’t see the
driver – played by the actress Mania Akbari – for the first few
minutes, instead experiencing the claustrophobia inside the car build
with the child’s terrifyingly adult remarks. “That makes three sentences
and they’re all rubbish,” he shouts, or “I can't live with you because
you are a selfish woman,” or “You'll never know how to talk and you’ll
never be anything” - all of which make it seem like he is
ventriloquising his father, from whom she has got a divorce. The boy
constantly instructs his mother to “say it calmly” or “don't shout in
the street”, while himself plugging his ears against her voice and
yelling louder to drown her out.
Like
in Taxi Tehran and in the two films about taxis that I discussed last
week (World Taxi and Night on Earth), the car in Ten is an unspoken site
of confession. Or sometimes, a refuge. When the driver’s seven-year-old
complains that she starts talking as soon as they get in the car, she
retorts unselfconsciously that there’s no privacy at home – the home she
shares with the new husband she's so happy to have acquired.
Driving
around the city seems to allow for long, frank exchanges, even with
women passengers she doesn't know well. A sex worker whose face we never
see insists that wives are also in a kind of trade with their husbands.
“You’re the wholesalers, we’re the retailers,” she scoffs. Another
woman who has lost a fiancé to a rival contender talks of another kind
of exchange, the one we conduct with God. “Before, praying seemed
ridiculous,” she says softly. “I used to say, you pray to force God to
give you things.” But both she and the car’s driver now find themselves
deriving a semblance of peace from their visits to a mausoleum.
If
the content of Ten’s conversations reveals a society politically and
legally skewed against woman, the form, too, has something to offer.
Male drivers often block Akbari’s path, she has to keep demanding right
of way. So there’s some quiet courage to be drawn from the penultimate
segment in which her young son returns, and inquires about first and
fifth gears. If he thinks his mother can teach him about driving,
perhaps that’s not a bad start.
Published in Mumbai Mirror, 13 Dec 2020.
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