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Bashu, le petit étranger

Original title: Bashu, gharibeye koochak
  • 1989
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
Bashu, le petit étranger (1989)
DramaWar

An Iranian boy is lost after fleeing home for his life; his family has been killed during the Iran-Iraq war. He's saved and trained by a middle-aged woman.An Iranian boy is lost after fleeing home for his life; his family has been killed during the Iran-Iraq war. He's saved and trained by a middle-aged woman.An Iranian boy is lost after fleeing home for his life; his family has been killed during the Iran-Iraq war. He's saved and trained by a middle-aged woman.

  • Director
    • Bahram Beyzaie
  • Writer
    • Bahram Beyzaie
  • Stars
    • Susan Taslimi
    • Parviz Poorhosseini
    • Adnan Afravian
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bahram Beyzaie
    • Writer
      • Bahram Beyzaie
    • Stars
      • Susan Taslimi
      • Parviz Poorhosseini
      • Adnan Afravian
    • 16User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos8

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    Top cast9

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    Susan Taslimi
    Susan Taslimi
    • Naii
    Parviz Poorhosseini
    Parviz Poorhosseini
    • Naii's husband
    Adnan Afravian
    • Bashu
    Golshan Anooshe
    • Loghman's wife
    Akbar Doodkar
    Akbar Doodkar
    • Marhamat
    Farokhlagha Hushmand
    • Sister-in-law
    Reza Hushmand
    Hamid Rahbar
    • Marhamat's son
    Azizollah Salmani
    • Loghman
    • Director
      • Bahram Beyzaie
    • Writer
      • Bahram Beyzaie
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    8.03.4K
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    Featured reviews

    10jakagmom

    When a displaced and scared boy has to survive, what does he have to rely on?

    "Bashu" is special, important, soulful, educational, touching and not to be missed by anyone who even mildly likes film.

    Aside from the cinematography acting as a medium and taking the viewer into the world of rural Iran, director Bahram Beizai uses supernatural touches to move the audience. Sussan Taslimi is tough and beautiful; the children in the film are delicious; the elders of the village are real, hateful, human.

    Very little dialogue moves the story along, another feature that makes this film watchable. The piece is shot with trust and slowness that you can bathe in the surroundings without having to feel that you are on a mystery hunt. There is mystery of course and not all of it is explained. It certainly is not a Hollywood movie. It is not even a European movie. it is simply, A MUST SEE MOVIE.
    10sbekam

    The best movie I have ever seen.

    Bashu deals with a very complex issue which is the vast cultural differences in Iran. It is masterfully done by one of the best directors of Iran, Bahram Beizai. Bashu is the name of a young boy from South-Western part of Iran who happens to end up in Northern part of Iran and experiences the cultural shock. In comparing these two parts of Iran, Beizai masterfully brings out the differences between the people, the climate, the costume, the language, and the past influence of Super-powers (Russia in the North and Britain in the South) meanwhile tying the story together to make a delightful movie.

    I saw this movie when it was first released, and have watched it over and over again and recommend it to all.
    8runamokprods

    Simple, human, touching

    A simple, human, quite touching Iranian film, about a 10 year old boy whose family is killed when the Persian Gulf is bombed by Iraq. Fleeing the war, he stows away on a truck and ends up in the verdant, peaceful north, where he struggles to fit in and start a new life. His adopted new small town is suspicious of outsiders, especially those with darker skin, and the boy speaks Arabic, whereas the locals speak a regional language. But he slowly finds his way, and finds love in a gentle, big hearted film about family, re-birth and hope.

    It's amazing how many good films have come out of Iran over the last generation. It's really become one of the last bastions of thoughtful, humanistic drama.
    10p_radulescu

    Great Humanity Pacing the Movie, Almost Unbearable

    The Iranian movies continue to astonish me. Beside Kiarostami, the number of Iranian directors making great movies is overwhelming. It is one of the most important movie schools, and the most amazing is that each of their movies is so firmly implanted in the Iranian universe while speaking out universal values.

    It was by chance that I watched Bashu today. I had found it on youTube, I had noted the address, to access it later. I decided this morning to see it, just to discover that my notice with the youTube address was lost! I gave a search on the web for Iranian movie with a boy who lost his family and I found it again! A ten years boy looses all his family when the village is bombed during the Iran-Iraq war. He escapes jumping on a cargo truck where he falls asleep. When he wakes up, he is in an unknown place where the landscape is totally different from what the boy knows. Unknown people speak an unknown language and look very different from him. Impossible to understand anyone, impossible to be understood.

    No wonder: the boy is from a province in the Southern part of Iran, near the Persian Gulf, and speaks Arabic, while the region where he has arrived is in the North, near the Caspian Sea, where people speak a very remote dialect of Farsi.

    But this we'll know much later, probably after the end of the movie, when we start to look for comments and reviews. During the movie we are absorbed in a universe of fantastic that calls in mind the stories of Eliade.

    What follows is a great story of love: maternal love and filial love. A woman with two kids of her own, initially reticent, will learn to love the boy like a mother, while the boy, initially just scared, will learn to love his new mother. And this unfolds despite the absolute barrier of language. Development of love, marked by moments when each of the two, the woman and the boy, just realize, with pain and joy, the intensity of the developing sentiment.

    Apparently a simple story, actually told with great cinematic finesse. A story rendered with a perfect economy of means: there is a lot that happens there on the screen, while nothing is superfluous, while each scene comes exactly when need is, no earlier, no later. And all the time you feel that the director is in perfect control.

    And above all, the great humanity that paces the movie, almost unbearable!
    9lisa floo

    Very moving film

    Bashu is a moving film about a young Iranian boy who's family is killed during a bombing raid. Bashu escapes by stowing away in the back of a truck and ends up in a completely different part of Iran. He is adopted by Naii, a mother of two young children who's husband is away looking for work.

    Bashu is nervous at first, especially as the townpeople are so hostile towards him, but Naii makes him welcome in a very touching and loving way. Naii is a very special person, combining gentleness and love with great strength. She has complete faith in Bashu and is rewarded in return with his smiles and happiness.

    I loved the scene with the other young boys of the village in the crop to help the plants grow quicker. The drumming was a recurring subject, and is particularly powerful when Bashu is drumming when Naii is sick.

    I thought the calling to the hawks showed a connection between Naii and Bashu but also added an earthiness and naturalness to both their characters.

    This is a very moving film and I recommend to anyone.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Na'i becomes sick and the villagers won't help, Bashu performs a zar ceremony. Zar refers to an African belief that the body has been possessed by an evil wind, and in order to be cured, a ceremony involving drumming and chanting must take place to subdue the wind and return the afflicted to health. It was brought to Iran by Africans (many of them through the slave trade).
    • Connections
      Featured in Nassereddin Shah, Actor-e Cinema (1992)

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    Production art
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    FAQ12

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 3, 1991 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Iran
    • Official site
      • sourehcinema
    • Languages
      • Persian
      • Arabic
    • Also known as
      • Bashu, the Little Stranger
    • Filming locations
      • Gilan, Iran
    • Production company
      • Kanun parvaresh fekri
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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