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IMDbPro

Persepolis

  • 2007
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
103K
YOUR RATING
Persepolis (2007)
This is the U.S. trailer for Persepolis, directed by Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi.
Play trailer2:14
13 Videos
56 Photos
Adult AnimationComing-of-AgeDocudramaHand-Drawn AnimationPeriod DramaPsychological DramaTeen DramaAnimationBiographyDrama

A precocious and outspoken Iranian girl grows up during the Islamic Revolution.A precocious and outspoken Iranian girl grows up during the Islamic Revolution.A precocious and outspoken Iranian girl grows up during the Islamic Revolution.

  • Directors
    • Vincent Paronnaud
    • Marjane Satrapi
  • Writers
    • Marjane Satrapi
    • Vincent Paronnaud
  • Stars
    • Chiara Mastroianni
    • Catherine Deneuve
    • Gena Rowlands
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    103K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Vincent Paronnaud
      • Marjane Satrapi
    • Writers
      • Marjane Satrapi
      • Vincent Paronnaud
    • Stars
      • Chiara Mastroianni
      • Catherine Deneuve
      • Gena Rowlands
    • 224User reviews
    • 248Critic reviews
    • 90Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 30 wins & 58 nominations total

    Videos13

    U.S. trailer: Persepolis
    Trailer 2:14
    U.S. trailer: Persepolis
    Persepolis: Scene 12
    Clip 1:10
    Persepolis: Scene 12
    Persepolis: Scene 12
    Clip 1:10
    Persepolis: Scene 12
    Persepolis: Scene 7
    Clip 1:36
    Persepolis: Scene 7
    Persepolis: Scene 5
    Clip 1:03
    Persepolis: Scene 5
    Persepolis: Scene 9
    Clip 1:07
    Persepolis: Scene 9
    Persepolis: Scene 4
    Clip 1:30
    Persepolis: Scene 4

    Photos56

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    Top cast65

    Edit
    Chiara Mastroianni
    Chiara Mastroianni
    • Marjane Adolescente et Adulte
    • (voice)
    Catherine Deneuve
    Catherine Deneuve
    • La Mère
    • (voice)
    Gena Rowlands
    Gena Rowlands
    • Grandmother
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Danielle Darrieux
    Danielle Darrieux
    • La Grand-Mère
    • (voice)
    Simon Abkarian
    Simon Abkarian
    • Le Père
    • (voice)
    Gabrielle Lopes Benites
    • Marjane Enfant
    • (voice)
    • (as Gabrielle Lopez)
    François Jerosme
    • Oncle Anouche
    • (voice)
    • (as François Jérosme)
    Sophie Arthuys
    • Walla
    • (voice)
    Jean-François Gallotte
    Jean-François Gallotte
      Arié Elmaleh
      Arié Elmaleh
      • Walla
      • (voice)
      Mathias Mlekuz
      • Walla
      • (voice)
      Sasha Alliel
        Lesceline Hasse
          Virginie Antico
            Nicolas Leroy
              Bénédicte Battesti
                Candide Lopes
                  Hubert Benhamdine
                  Hubert Benhamdine
                    • Directors
                      • Vincent Paronnaud
                      • Marjane Satrapi
                    • Writers
                      • Marjane Satrapi
                      • Vincent Paronnaud
                    • All cast & crew
                    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

                    User reviews224

                    8.0103.4K
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                    Featured reviews

                    9Rick_Bman

                    A wonderful told story with a unique style

                    Persepolis tells the amazing story of a young girl growing up in Iran around the time of the Islamic Revolution. Marjane Satrapi does a wonderful job of bringing her story to life and drawing the viewer into her what it was to grow up during a time of political revolution. Using a unique style of animation, that closely follows the style of the graphic novel, the audience is pulled into a world that is much different than the world they are used to.

                    Marjane's story is often times humorous and often times heart breaking without resorting to heavy handed sentimentalism that is often seen in Hollywood movies. There were times that I laughed out loud during the movie, particularly the "Eye of the Tiger" sequence which had me in stitches. Other times during the film I had to wipe a tear from my eye. I won't spoil any of those moments for anyone, but there were parts of the film that left me crushed.

                    The characters in the story were all very interesting and all seemed very real. I loved watching Marjane grow from a child to an adult and seeing how she dealt with struggles as extreme as a revolution and as simple as the end of a relationship. Most of the supporting characters were interesting as well and extremely well thought out. The most memorable of the side characters though, would have to be Marjane's grandmother. She almost acted as Marjane's moral compass throughout the film and in most cases she did it with a great cynicism and humor that only someone who has lived through so much could have.

                    As an American I will probably never know what it is like to live in a state of such political oppression as the one depicted in the film. It is an extremely hard thing to even imagine what people go through during such political struggles. However, one of the things that makes this movie unique is that a lot of it is told from the point of view of a child that does not really understand the politics of what is going on around her. This really helped draw me into the movie. Since I do not understand what it is like to be in the situation, having the story told from the point of view of someone that doesn't really grasp the enormity of the events unfolding around her really helped to bring me into the story. It was very helpful in trying to comprehend the scale of what was happening in the movie, not that I claim to totally comprehend what this young girl must have gone through.

                    The animation style of the film is definitely interesting and unique. It is a lot different than anything I have seen before and I really enjoyed the style that was used. The more simplistic animation that was used definitely worked well with the story being told from the point of view of a child. The child in the story could not totally grasp all the details of what was going on during the revolution and having a less detailed style of animation definitely helped emphasize this. Also, having a style of animation that was so different than what audience are used to also helped emphasize that we were viewing a world that was, in many ways, much different than our own.

                    Overall I really enjoyed the film and it is one that I may eventually want to see again. I really would like to read the graphic novels that it was based on and probably even a few of the other graphic novels written by Marjane Satrapi. I think she is a wonderful talent and I hope she continues to make such interesting films, perhaps bringing some of her other graphic novels to the big screen.
                    9monomagazine

                    the book is a fuller experience

                    I rated this film a 9 more as a visual complement to the comic book (of two volumes, now bound as one), which I believe to be a masterpiece. If you left the film less than emotionally attached to the characters, PLEASE give the book a chance, because, as is often the case, episodes and histories of a lot of the characters, including Marjane, are left out to adapt the story to a film medium. Having said that, there are great sequences, expressionistic animation, and the wiseass grandma is left fully intact from the books! I can understand why some people weren't emotionally compelled by it though, since the movie doesn't take the time to fill the audience in on all the quirkiness and endearing qualities of the characters as Satrapi originally conceived them.
                    8inglis-5

                    A very personal yet universal account of the Iranian revolution

                    I came out of this movie feeling as if I knew Marjane Satrapi. The way in which the story is told is fantastic - it really is as if you're reading her journal. As she grows up from being a young girl to an adult, at each age the story is told with a corresponding maturity, and highlighting things which seem like very personal memories. As a young girl, the stories she is told are very black and white, and as she gets older the complexity increases, which is exactly what you would expect. Although there is lots of political activity, she makes fun of herself and highlights her own shortcomings as much as she highlights the repressive elements in her homeland. By telling of her own experiences it really is extremely easy to see how so much of it is common to a whole generation of Iranians. Her love of her family and her country came across very strongly, and you really felt as if she had laid herself bare. A moving and entertaining movie as much as it is educational about post-1979 Iran.
                    10MaxBorg89

                    A whole new kind of animation

                    Persepolis is one of the most thoughtful, poignant and original films I have ever seen. Hang on, "poignant" and "thoughful", an animated movie (and based on a comic-book, on top of that)? Exactly, because coincidentally Persepolis also happens to be the first really adult "cartoon" I've had the pleasure to watch (Waking Life and A Scanner Darkly don't count, as they were filmed with real actors first, and subsequently modified in post-production). For all their good intentions, the likes of Dreamworks and Pixar always have an eye for what the little ones want to see, while The Simpsons, despite the occasional "mature" storyline (basically Homer and Marge's sex life), contains nothing a 12-year old isn't supposed to see. As for Family Guy and South Park, they might be aimed at grown-ups with their merciless satire and, in the case of the latter series, explicit language, but are made with an almost puerile sense of joy which prompts younger kids to watch them in secret. Persepolis, on the other hand, deals with adult themes in a serious, unpretentious way. So yes, it is an animated film. Yes, it is based on a comic-book. And yes, there is the occasional neat movie reference (Rocky III being the most memorable one). That doesn't mean it's a kids' movie, though; it just means the picture was made with a particular style because it was the most effective way to tell this specific story.

                    And what is so special about the story? Well, it is an account of what is going on in contemporary Iran, a topic that is more relevant today than it's ever been before. And the extra layer of poignancy derives from the fact that co-director Marjane Satrapi experienced every single event in the film. After moving to France to avoid the increasingly oppressive political situation that had developed in Teheran (which the ancient Greeks called Persepolis, hence the movie's title), she published her autobiography in the form of a graphic novel, which immediately became a cult phenomenon. With the help of artist Vincent Paronnaud, the stylized drawings have become a motion picture which has already conquered critics and won several awards (the Jury Prize in Cannes being one of them).

                    The film's strict adherence to the book's style makes for simple but powerful viewing: the simple pictures ensure the story doesn't need to be filtered, but can be understood right away, while the use of black and white provide the images with a strength that would otherwise be missing. A good example is a scene depicting a demonstration against the despotic regime in Iran and the subsequent shooting of one of the protesters, whose body is left lying on the ground: as his blood starts to flow, the corpse almost merges with the environment, giving the shot (pun not intended) an emotional relevance it wouldn't have, had the whole thing been in color. The choice of animation proves to be particularly effective in a most unusual choice for this kind of film, namely fantasy sequences: there is a hilarious moment, for instance, when Marjane, during a stay in Vienna, looks back on her disappointment in love and sees her ex-boyfriend as a depraved freak; live-action would have ruined that scene, undoubtedly. As it is, however, it comes off not as a bizarre formal experiment, but a fundamental tool for understanding the heroine's psychology.

                    That said, it should also be noted that Persepolis isn't just a bold take on the difficulties in the Middle East. As seen in Clint Eastwoood's Iwo Jima double bill, the line between "heroes" and "villains" is very thin, and the film never misses the opportunity to show how bad our own society can be: Marjane ends up hating Europe more than her home-country, and at the beginning a flashback shows the British government's role in manipulating Iranian politics for money's sake. Incidentally, the latter scene is depicted as a puppet show, providing a new, fresh angle: what sets truth apart from fiction?

                    Persepolis works because it handles an uncomfortable subject with grace, using a simple but constantly effective storytelling technique and never once pandering to audience expectations with the usual 'toon gimmicks (even the casting proves that: except for Catherine Deneuve, who plays the low-key role of Marjane's mother, there are no famous voices in the feature). It sticks to traditions and stretches the medium at the same time, showing that animation is no longer a "children's genre" and therefore delivering a new way to look at film-making and its possibilities. For this reason, and several more, it is one of the best pictures of 2007.
                    8VoiceOfEurope

                    Intellectual and funny autobiographical animation. One of a kind

                    Marjane Satrapi's venture to present the chronicle of the Iranian Islamic revolution filtered through the eyes of a lively and cheeky, French-educated young girl is bold and ambitious. To do so by the help of strong-silhouetted, axe-carved, triangle-nosed cartoon figures is even more peculiar. Her powerful heroine – Marjane, named by no coincidence after the creator – however, spectacularly succeeds in replacing and emulating any possible real flesh characters. She is intellectual, witty, utterly impudent and very funny; the essential Euro-kid of the wild and untamed 1970s and early 1980s.

                    This brilliant movie serves as a study proving that animation is more powerful and potent than ever before no matter how unsophisticated and basic the visual elements are. And although the technique used in Persepolis has long been present it can be said that perfection has just been achieved.

                    Satrapi's work is so very French: wantonly intellectual, acrimoniously witty, utterly sarcastic and outrageously funny. However, even this masterpiece could not escape common places and is not without disturbing occurrences of generalization of characters and situations. Still, you will have a wide and genuine smile on your face coming out of the theater. Persepolis is per se unique and compelling with the ability to make you smile at the right moments - when tension has built up too much.

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                    Storyline

                    Edit

                    Did you know

                    Edit
                    • Trivia
                      Iran's government sent a letter to the French embassy in Tehran to protest against the movie and pressured the organizers of the 2007 Bangkok Film Festival to drop it from the lineup.
                    • Goofs
                      Marjane's passport has her given name and surname switched.
                    • Quotes

                      Marjane's grandmother: Listen. I don't like to preach, but here's some advice. You'll meet a lot of jerks in life. If they hurt you, remember it's because they're stupid. Don't react to their cruelty. There's nothing worse than bitterness and revenge. Keep your dignity and be true to yourself.

                    • Connections
                      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Bucket List/The Orphanage/The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep/There Will Be Blood/Honeydripper/Persepolis (2008)
                    • Soundtracks
                      Eye of the Tiger
                      Written by Jim Peterik (as James Peterik), Frankie Sullivan (as Franck Sullivan III)

                      (c) Three Wise Boys Music / Ensign Music Corp c/o BMG Music Publishing France

                      (c) WB Music Corp / Easy Action Music

                      By permission from Warner Chappell Music France and BMG Music Vision

                      Performed by Chiara Mastroianni

                      Arranged by Olivier Bernet

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                    Details

                    Edit
                    • Release date
                      • June 27, 2007 (France)
                    • Countries of origin
                      • France
                      • United States
                    • Official sites
                      • Official MySpace (France)
                      • Sony Pictures Classics (United States)
                    • Languages
                      • French
                      • English
                      • Persian
                      • German
                    • Also known as
                      • Giấc Mơ Kỳ Lạ
                    • Production companies
                      • 2.4.7. Films
                      • France 3 Cinéma
                      • The Kennedy/Marshall Company
                    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

                    Box office

                    Edit
                    • Budget
                      • $7,300,000 (estimated)
                    • Gross US & Canada
                      • $4,445,756
                    • Opening weekend US & Canada
                      • $88,826
                      • Dec 30, 2007
                    • Gross worldwide
                      • $22,783,990
                    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

                    Tech specs

                    Edit
                    • Runtime
                      1 hour 36 minutes
                    • Color
                      • Color
                      • Black and White
                    • Sound mix
                      • Dolby Digital
                    • Aspect ratio
                      • 1.85 : 1

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