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IMDbPro

Parwareshghah

  • 2019
  • 1h 30min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.6/10
703
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Parwareshghah (2019)
Drama

Un revendedor de boletos de 15 años en Kabul sueña con Bollywood hasta que los soviéticos lo obligan a ingresar a una instalación estatal.Un revendedor de boletos de 15 años en Kabul sueña con Bollywood hasta que los soviéticos lo obligan a ingresar a una instalación estatal.Un revendedor de boletos de 15 años en Kabul sueña con Bollywood hasta que los soviéticos lo obligan a ingresar a una instalación estatal.

  • Dirección
    • Shahrbanoo Sadat
  • Guionista
    • Shahrbanoo Sadat
  • Elenco
    • Anwar Hashimi
    • Daria Gaiduk
    • Hasibullah Rasooli
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.6/10
    703
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Shahrbanoo Sadat
    • Guionista
      • Shahrbanoo Sadat
    • Elenco
      • Anwar Hashimi
      • Daria Gaiduk
      • Hasibullah Rasooli
    • 8Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 24Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio ganado y 7 nominaciones en total

    Fotos6

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
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    + 3
    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal15

    Editar
    Anwar Hashimi
    • Anwar (the supervisor)
    Daria Gaiduk
    • Sima Petrovna
    Hasibullah Rasooli
    • Hasib
    Karan Jeet Singh
    • Karan Jeet
    Qodrat
    • Qodrat
    • (as Quodratollah Qadiri)
    Eshanullah Kharoti
    • Eshan
    Masihullah
    • Feraji
    Fridoon Muradi
    • Feraidoon
    Sediqa
    • Sediqa
    Ahmad Fayaz Osmani
    • Fayaz
    Abdul Rahman Formoli
    • Rahman
    Nahid Yakmanesh
    • Miss Deputy Director
    Asadullah Kabiri
    • Asad
    Arthur Köstler
    • Commander of Mujahideen
    Yama Yakmanesh
    • Mister Director
    • Dirección
      • Shahrbanoo Sadat
    • Guionista
      • Shahrbanoo Sadat
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios8

    6.6703
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7mbrcf

    A very interesting film!

    The film is about a kid named Qodratullah who is forced to live in an orphanage by the pro-Soviet government of Afghanistan in 19189 Kabul. As soon as he arrives in the orphanage which is around 10-15 minutes in, the director lifts her focus and camera from the kid and tries instead to capture every elements in that place such as the kids, the dorms, the teachers and supervisers and so on.

    This film is made based on unpublished diaries of Mr. Anwar Hashimi who also stars in this film and he lived in such a place for 8 years when he was a teenager. As a result, the main focus and star of this film is the mentioned orphanage and director Shahrbanoo Sadat reflects on Afghans culture and the country's political state at that time period as a subplot to the life in the orphanage.

    The filmmakers have done their best to give us a human, sans cliche film and they have pretty much succeeded doing so. If you've got a chance to see this piece, don't miss it.
    3dommercaldi

    Unfocused, Far Too Slow-Paced, Irrelevant Sub-Plots, Uninteresting Characters, But Decent Cinematography And Hindu-Urdu Sing-A-Longs

    Pros: 1. The dialogue is incredibly grounded and genuine, thus giving the conversations an air of realism to the adolescent boy interactions. 2. The cinematography is gorgeously scaled-back, again adding to the realistic feel. 3. The short intermittent sing-a-long scenes in Hindu-Urdu are exceedingly entertaining, bizarre, and eye-popping. 4. The film does a great job at highlighting the similarities between The West and pre-Mujahideen Afghanistan.

    Cons: 1. The movie is needlessly slow-paced and, at times, is a little bit of a chore to get through. 2. Most of the characters are unspeakably plane and uninteresting, with nothing to them (the exception being Qodrat (Quodratollah Qadiri) as he's shown to be thrifty, however that trait is shown early on and is then forgotten about). 3. The acting is generally really stale and uninspiring. 4. The script is unfocused, disjointed, and it often feels that the scenes are just jumping from one-to-the-next with little coherence. 5. There are copious sub-plots introduced, and then carelessly discarded with no resolution. With examples being, Qodrat's possible love interest, or the Russian military presence and Russian diplomatic ties to pre-Mujahideen Afghanistan. 6. The ending death of Anwar (Anwar Hashimi) falls resolutely flat as he's barely a character, and the death isn't set up at all. It also doesn't help that there's this strange sing-and-fight sequence straight after.
    8MOscarbradley

    A lovely, unsentimental coming-of-age movie

    "The Orphanage" may techincally be a 'Danish' film but it's set in Kabul during the Russian invasion and it is as much a homage to Bollywood as anything and is a much better one than Danny Boyle's "Slumdog Millionaire". It's hero is Qodrat, (Quodratollah Qadiri, wonderful and basically playing himself), a teenage boy living on the streets who is arrested for selling cinema tickets illegally and put in the orphange of the title; it turns out to be the making of him.

    Shahrbanoo Sadat's second feature could easily have been full of neo-realist angst but Sadat imbues it with so much affection that the angst completely disappears even if the Bollywood tendency to kitsch is never far away while it's young cast, (non-professionals all), are excellent. This is a political film where the politics take a back seat and a coming-of-age movie devoid of sentimentality. Its sweetness is intoxicating and even when tragedy strikes Sadat never over-emphasizes but simply accepts that this is the way things are. A really lovely film.
    8rannynm

    Message of Hope, Despite All Circumstances

    The Orphanage is a stellar film conveying the need for true heartfelt cinematic experiences. Beautiful cinematography creates a transcendent movie experience, with a script based on the unpublished diaries of Anwar Hashim, who plays a supporting role in the film. Acclaimed director Shahrbanoo Sadat uses personal experiences to convey an uplifting message.

    Wolf and Sheep, the prequel to The Orphanage, premiered in 2016. Like its predecessor, The Orphanage is based on real life experiences in Afghanistan. The movie chronicles the main character, Qodrat (Qodratollah Qadiri), who spends his days trying to survive by illegally selling overpriced movie tickets and key rings. He is then brought to a Russian-operated orphanage along with other teenage boys, where he is given the opportunity to get an education alongside his peers. The Orphanage details his experiences in the orphanage and how the quarrels between roommates of the dorms are dealt with by the director Anwar (Anwar Hashimi). All throughout a war torn country in 1989, Qodrat remains hopeful, through fantasy sequences shared with the audience.

    The cinematography is what truly stands out in this film. Directory of photography, Virginie Surdej captures the beauty of the country while adding to the heartbreaking story. My favorite part of this movie is the performances by the young people, including Qodratollah Qadiri, who gives rare insight into real life in Afghanistan, as they are all natives of the country.

    The message of this film is about the importance of hope, despite all circumstances. The protagonist, Qodrat, remains hopeful and looks for positive routes of escapism throughout his struggles of growing up without a family, and his struggles at the orphanage. You should be aware that the film contains strong language and minor adult content. There are also two graphic descriptions of war and violence. There is also some references to sex and pornographic images (very far away from the screen, but still visible) that are unsuitable for younger kids.

    I give The Orphanage 4 out of 5 stars and recommend it for ages 15 to 18, plus adults. Reviewed by Erin M., KIDS FIRST!
    5yusufpiskin

    Afganistan

    In writer-director Shahrbanoo Sadat's second feature, a young man who daydreams of action-packed Bollywood heroics finds himself in a considerably more dangerous position in real life: that of an orphan scraping by in Kabul at the end of the 1980s, with the Soviets maintaining control as the Mujahideen fight to take their land back.

    Part two of a planned five-part series that began with 2016's Wolf and Sheep - which, like this movie, premiered in Cannes' Directors' Fortnight - The Orphanage (Parwareshgah) is a small yet touching chronicle where innocent teenage boys fall prey to socio-political forces way beyond their control.

    Mixing historical docudrama and make-believe, the story is not exactly a tightly knit narrative, with an observant tone that has its nonprofessional cast oscillating between scenes of harsh reality and pure film fantasy. It should play more festivals after Cannes and nab a few art house pickups abroad, especially in Europe.

    Qodratollah Qadiri, who also toplined Wolf and Sheep and is poised to become Sadat's very own Antoine Doinel if the two keep working together, stars as Quodrat, a friendly streetwise teenager who makes a modest living reselling tickets to his favorite Bollywood flicks, which he himself sits and watches with wide-eyed appreciation.

    When he's rounded up by the cops and sent to a public orphanage, Quodrat's life shifts from a carefree hand-to-mouth existence to a stricter hierarchy ruled by bullies and overseen by a kindhearted administrator (Sediqa Rasuli). He soon befriends a group of boys who become his roommates, including the chess master, Masihullah (Masihullah Feraji), his nephew Fayaz (Ahmad Fayaz Omani) - the uncle and nephew are both teens - and the war-obsessed Hasib (Hasibullah Rasooli).

    Together, the four live through several Little Rascals-style adventures, forgetting where they are for the time being and enjoying themselves like any boys left to their own devices. Sadat mixes those scenes with Bollywood-inspired flights-of-fancy where Quodrat and his buddies lip-sync to gushy ballads or showcase the fighting skills of action superstars like Anil Kapoor. (In the press notes, the director explains how Bollywood movies were hugely popular in Kabul during the 1980s.)

    But those illusions hide a grimmer truth, with one boy going mad and locked up in a wretched psych ward, and another accidentally killed by leftover ammunition stolen from a Russian tank. As much as Quodrat can imagine movies in his mind, what he sees in the real world is far scarier: a place where orphans like him seem to be expendable.

    Sadat cuts a little too systematically between the reality and fantasy scenes throughout the narrative, which heads to some predictable places despite the unique setting. The most memorable thing about The Orphanage is actually not all the movie make-believe, which feels like a device used before, but rather the way it shows how life under Soviet rule could in fact be beneficial for boys in Quodrat's situation.

    This is most evident in a long sequence where the orphans take a trip to a summer camp in the Soviet Union, working on their Russian (which they are already learning back in Afghanistan) and partaking in various activities, as if they were regular kids and not orphans at all. Probably the most moving shot in the entire film is one where we see Masihullah's reaction after playing computer chess for the first time and beating the machine - it's a rare victory in an otherwise depleted life.

    Like Wolf and Sheep, Sadat shot the movie in Tadjikistan, mixing natural splendors with the starker institutional interiors. A grainy look makes the film feel like it was actually made in the 80s, adding to its historical authenticity. When, at the end, the orphanage risks tumbling along with the Soviet regime, you're left with the harrowing feeling that for Quodrat and his friends, it's out of the frying pan and into the fire..

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    • How long is The Orphanage?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 27 de noviembre de 2019 (Francia)
    • Países de origen
      • Dinamarca
      • Luxemburgo
      • Francia
      • Alemania
      • Afganistán
      • Corea del Sur
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Farsi dari
      • Ruso
      • Hindi
      • Urdu
    • También se conoce como
      • The Orphanage
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Alemania(location)
    • Productoras
      • Adomeit Film
      • La Fabrica Nocturna Cinéma
      • Samsa Film
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 30min(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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