Best Majid Majidi Movies Till Date

 

Majid Majidi movies are based on children innocence. Children innocence always has an impact on adults and that's the agenda of the film. The films show Iranic culture on a global level. The films are simple and have plain processes for the earnest feelings. Today, we will be talking about some of his best movies

5. BAREFOOT TO HERAT (2003)

Most of the Majid Majidi's movies are loved by people. He has bben making short documentaries since a long time. Barefoot to Herat is a disturbing stry of Afghan refugees. It shows the journey if the refugees escaping the city of Herat and others. It shows the struggle of the families going through desolation, displacement facing hunger ad death. The movie's title comes from a little boy who starts his two hours walk barefoot. He tries to reach the nearest city with his siblings for some food. 

4. CHILDREN OF HEAVEN (1997)

This movie is a story of two children and a pair of shoes. The brother loses his sister's repaired shoes when he passes by the market. He then makes an agreement of sharing his one pair of shoes and this causes a lot of issues in thier lives. It is the first globally aclaimed film of Majidi. The style of the film is very simple and flowy. There are some lose ends but they are negligiable. The sincerity of this film is highly infectious and impossible to elude. Bacheha-ye Aseman, (Children of Heaven) is Majidi’s most popular film and an instant classic.

3. THE COLOR OF PARADISE (1999)

This movie is very powerful, it will tear you up in the first ten minutes. The story execution is very swift and you won't realise when the movie will start involving you. It is a story of a man for whom his son's blindness is a shame and liability for him. The film explores the relationship between man and nature. 

2. THE SONG OF SPARROWS (2008)

This movie is the most valuable duisplay of Majidi's work. The characters are inesacapble.  According to the whiz, people from all walks of life watch his films and everyone needs to recognize the emotions. Hence, he prefers to communicate through visual language over the spoken one.

1. BARAN (2001)

The main character of the film doesn't speak a word. Their is a silent love in the film. For many years following the Iranian Revolution in 1979, women and love related films were banned in Iran. But the Third Republic is far more tolerant and emancipated. Filmmakers are given further freedom to construct the type of narration they want to. Baran, is the exact example of that. Latif mutely observes Baran. She is combing her hair by the window, and he sees her silhouette. Such a naive representation of women and/or love could have been considered immoral in Iran, just a few years back.