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Women's Prison
Women's Prison
Actors: Roya Nonahali, Roya Taymourian, Pegah Ahangarani, Maryam Boubani, Golab Adineh
Director: Manijeh Hekmat
Genres: Indie & Art House, Drama, Mystery & Suspense
UR     2006     1hr 46min

Banned in Iran, this taboo-breaking film uses the claustrophobic life of women behind bars as a metaphor for Iranian society since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Mitra, in prison for killing her violent stepfather, confronts...  more »

     
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Movie Details

Actors: Roya Nonahali, Roya Taymourian, Pegah Ahangarani, Maryam Boubani, Golab Adineh
Director: Manijeh Hekmat
Genres: Indie & Art House, Drama, Mystery & Suspense
Sub-Genres: Indie & Art House, Drama, Mystery & Suspense
Studio: First Run Features
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen - Subtitled
DVD Release Date: 12/19/2006
Original Release Date: 01/01/2002
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/2002
Release Year: 2006
Run Time: 1hr 46min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Subtitles: English

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Movie Reviews

Two Women Locked Up
Amos Lassen | Little Rock, Arkansas | 01/08/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

""Women's Prison"

Two Women Locked Up

Amos Lassen

"Women's Prison (First Run Features" looks at a period of 18 years in a women's prison in Iran and it follows two women--the new warden, Tahereh,
who is a devout Muslim and an army veteran and Mitra, a young midwife who is serving time for murdering the abusive husband of her mother. Mitra is constantly punished as the warden tries to break her into prison life. However, during an eight year period, the warden's attitude begins to change when Mitra protects another inmate from rape. Mitra helps deliver a baby in jail and that baby returns to the prison some 17 years later because she has become a delinquent. The warden now changed protects the young girl because she respects Mitra.
The women wear down during the incarceration and Mitra gains the respect of all of the prisoners and when she is finally set free, there is a cheer by all. It is very interesting to see how the two women comes to respect each other. The acting is first rate and we get an in depth picture of life in a women's prison as well as the difficulties, prejudice and suppression that occurs there on a daily basis. This is not the kind of film that we go to see for enjoyment but rather to learn. Here we reap information about the intricacies of prison life and an exploration of the balance of power and how it can change.
"
Engrossing in a morbid way
Mary McGreevey | SAn Francisco | 08/02/2008
(3 out of 5 stars)

"This film starts with a whimper and ends with a whine, yet, although one realizes it from the minute one buys it, it is indeed strangely engrossing. The chaos and filth of this Iranian women's prison, starting in 1984, with the Mullahs in charge already four years, extending all the way until 2001: we in the West can see how many women were suddenly considered "unIslamic" and therefore condemned to prison, if not death. What struck me is the horrific resemblance to old-style Catholic nuns, who did instruct us in a grammar school in San Francisco: their completely black outfits, their sternness and their lack of smiling or other expressions. A new warden arrives, aims for cleanliness and discipline, and she gets it, using the solitary cell and male-delivered lashings. There is a strong sense of sadistic pleasure emanating...

Meanwhile, the inmates seem to be mostly in for adultery or prostitution, because they are poor; our one main character arrives young and tough, having killed her stepfather when she saw him beat her mother. Her spirit is not completely broken, but we see her sadly becomes more morose and aged as the film proceeds, with a bemused look at the new young ones coming in, still high-spirited. They call her "Auntie Mitra" at the end, when her hair is turning white under the mandatory hejab.

The prison itself is 1800's-grim, with old brick walls, a large yard for exercise, hand laundry and dish-washing. The prisoners appear to make their own clothes, cook and clean, and wash clothes in small buckets. They do not wear uniforms, but normal street clothes, and only with a new warden do they really begin to use the hejab. They even have one proper long coat, all in the same print material, with which they attend their trials.

If you think that this is a dreary tale so far, well, yes, it is. But the sheer spirit and comraderie of these women impressed me. They sing, they dance, they stage mock weddings, they withstand blackouts, they do sports in the yards, have friends and cliques, and talk incessantly. They're usually in the long, wide corridor together, freely walking between the cells, unless the warden wants to punish them by locking them in for a day to their respective group cells, about 10 beds per cell. One might even say that they're having a pretty good time, except for being locked up. They even have their children with them, which all seem to keep an eye on. One baby, born in the prison in 1984, re-appears as a 17-year-old ringleader and cocksure thief, whose mother had been executed; our heroine Mitra had been trained as a midwife and delivered her in that cell, with a blackout going on. Mitra remembered her mother and told the eager girl about her; they became close in the prison.

One word of caution: I am laid up with an Achilles Tendon rupture, have to kill the time somehow with books and films, and so I watch almost anything. But I liked this film. The filmmaker was herself involved in Iran's women's prisons and tried to show exactly how things were in there.

Libraries probably carry this as "educational" and "banned in Iran!"

"
Interesting
Kelley Hunt | Texas, USA | 03/21/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The story begins in the early 1980's and ends a little after the turn of the century. Although there are two main characters; the warden, and a murderess named Mitra, I think the story is really about the "whys" of these women being in prison. Some are in prison for "unislamic conduct", others for their political or religious views, and yet another woman is in prison because her husband has accused her of adultery. Besides the "whys" issue, I think this film also wishes to show the conditions of women's prisons in Iran. The prison is a broken-down building, the inside is dirty and the women are covered with lice. Some of the women have been imprisoned with their young children. Yes, these children actually grow up in the prison. One child is left behind as his mother is dragged to the gallows. Disorderly prisoners are subject to solitary confinement, and lashings. In one scene prisoners are forced to stand outside for hours in the snow. Rape by male prison guards is also suggested. No wonder the film is banned in Iran. I thought this was an interesting film - the story, acting, costumes, and setting were all very good."