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Syngué Sabour - Pierre de patience

Original title: Syngué sabour, pierre de patience
  • 2012
  • R
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
Golshifteh Farahani in Syngué Sabour - Pierre de patience (2012)
In a country torn apart by war, Afghanistan or elsewhere... A young woman in her thirties watches over her older husband in a decrepit room. A bullet in the neck has reduced him to a comatose state. He has been abandoned by his fellow combatants and even by his own brothers. One day, the woman's vigil changes. She begins to speak truth to her silent husband, telling him about her childhood, her suffering, her frustrations, her loneliness, her dreams, desires, and secrets. After years of living under his control, with no voice of her own,she says things she could never have spoken before, even though they have been married for ten years.
Play trailer2:00
6 Videos
13 Photos
DramaWar

In a war ridden country a woman watches over the husband reduced to a vegetable state by a bullet in the neck, abandoned by Jihad companions and brothers. One day, the woman decides to say t... Read allIn a war ridden country a woman watches over the husband reduced to a vegetable state by a bullet in the neck, abandoned by Jihad companions and brothers. One day, the woman decides to say things to him she could never have done before.In a war ridden country a woman watches over the husband reduced to a vegetable state by a bullet in the neck, abandoned by Jihad companions and brothers. One day, the woman decides to say things to him she could never have done before.

  • Director
    • Atiq Rahimi
  • Writers
    • Jean-Claude Carrière
    • Atiq Rahimi
  • Stars
    • Golshifteh Farahani
    • Hamid Djavadan
    • Hassina Burgan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    5.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Atiq Rahimi
    • Writers
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
      • Atiq Rahimi
    • Stars
      • Golshifteh Farahani
      • Hamid Djavadan
      • Hassina Burgan
    • 22User reviews
    • 78Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos6

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Theatrical Trailer
    The Patience Stone: Alive (US)
    Clip 1:05
    The Patience Stone: Alive (US)
    The Patience Stone: Alive (US)
    Clip 1:05
    The Patience Stone: Alive (US)
    The Patience Stone: Hold Your Breath (US)
    Clip 0:56
    The Patience Stone: Hold Your Breath (US)
    The Patience Stone: Impure (US)
    Clip 0:36
    The Patience Stone: Impure (US)
    The Patience Stone: Commander (US)
    Clip 0:58
    The Patience Stone: Commander (US)
    The Patience Stone: Patience Stone (US)
    Clip 1:06
    The Patience Stone: Patience Stone (US)

    Photos12

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Golshifteh Farahani
    Golshifteh Farahani
    • La femme
    Hamid Djavadan
    • L'homme
    • (as Hamidreza Javdan)
    Hassina Burgan
    • La tante
    Massi Mrowat
    Massi Mrowat
    • Le jeune soldat
    Mohamed Al Maghraoui
    • Le mollah
    • (as Mohamed Maghraoui)
    Malak Djaham Khazal
    • Le voisine
    Faiz Fazli
    • Homme armé
    Hatim Seddiki
    • Homme turban 1
    • (as Hatim Seddiki)
    Mouhcine Malzi
    • Homme turban 2
    Amine Ennaji
    • Homme turban 3
    Hiba Lharrak
    • La fille ainée
    Aya Abida
    • La jeune soeur
    Fatima Mastouri
    • Femme agée
    Sabah Benseddik
    • Prostituée alcôve
    Ahmed Ait Mahrabi
    • Homme fauteuil
    Mustapha Lamsawab
    • Mari voisine
    Mostafa Jamai
    • Fils de la voisine
    Ghaya El Marouane
    • Fille voisine
    • Director
      • Atiq Rahimi
    • Writers
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
      • Atiq Rahimi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    7.15.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7CinemaSerf

    The Patience Stone

    In a war-torn Muslim nation (that we can presume is Afghanistan) we are introduced to a young woman (Golshifteh Farahani) who is trying to look after her two young daughters whilst their father is lying lifeless on a mattress with a bullet hole in his neck. His colleagues have long deserted them and so she must try - with the help of a nearby aunt (Hassina Burgan) - to keep her family safe whilst nursing her husband as best she can. There are militia everywhere and with him paralysed on the floor, she has to find ingenious ways to try and hide him from their murderous hands. As the days pass, she begins to talk to the man (and us) and that provides for much of the fairly traumatic backstory that sees her exposed to brutality, indifference and negligence since childhood. She also has an encounter with the local commander whom she convinces she sells her body "for the pleasure of men". He is disgusted but seems to have mentioned this to his men as a nervous young man (Massi Mrowat) appears on the doorstep ostensibly just looking to pay for sex but actually he is in need of a great deal more. Vulnerabilities are rife amidst the chaos of war. Gradually, her memories become more descriptive, more explicit and by the conclusion we know much more about her than perhaps she had realised. Is he listening, though? It's most unusual to have an incapacitated man, on death's door, serving as a conduit for a story like this but it works effectively. She tells us a story riddled with persecution - physically and intellectually and once she has opened the floodgates, her resentment pours out. It's not a rant, there's not really that much rancour. It is a measured and rational evaluation of her life and of her treatment by those she loved and who were supposed to care for her in return. It invites us to critique the austerity of her faith, and of her sex's role within that framework, without telling us exactly what to think. Any judgements here are ours. It can get a little repetitive at times but Faharani exudes a sense of intensity that does make this quite a poignant watch.
    7corrosion-2

    Glowing Golshifteh

    The Patience Stone is based on an old Persian fable about a stone to whom one can confide all one's problems and worries. Here though the stone is an Afghan man, reduced to a vegetable state by the war. His wife (Golshifteh Farahani) uses his inability to comprehend and talk back to tell him things that she would not dare to say otherwise. With his disability she's been left to feed herself, her two children and continue buying medicine to keep her husband alive. The only job available for an Afghan woman in her desperate situation it seems is prostitution.

    Atiq Rahimi has directed from his own novel. He wrote the script with the renowned veteran screen writer Jean-Claude Carrierre. It is, I feel, a story best suited to theatre with its long monologues. The film however, belongs to and is carried by Golshifteh Farahani's magnificent performance. This is a very tough role where she has to, for most part, talk to a body lying motionless and unresponsive on the ground, unable to engage in any dialogue. A poetic film which is not for all tastes but which will richly reward those who appreciate its form and messages.
    7postsenthil

    A VERY GOOD WATCH !!

    Noted Afghan born writer/director Atiq Rahimi adapts his own prize-winning novel to a screen drama in The Patience Stone.

    It is the story a nameless Muslim Woman (Golshifteh Farahani) caught in the cusp of a fierce war zone in an unnamed country (what could probably be Afghanistan). She is tending to her much aged husband (nameless gain), a wounded warrior who is presently in a vegetative state with no apparent sign of life or senses. Early in the movie when the onset of war is obvious, she packs off her two children to a safe haven. However, she is forced to stay on to look after her husband. A husband whom she had not met even after her marriage. She married a photograph of him as he was fighting for the cause.

    On his return, the husband turns out to be an oppressive and conservative person in stark contrast to all her dreams. Now, on finding him in a comatose deaf-mute state, she, for the first time since her marriage, feels a surge of freedom. She sees him as the titular mythological Syngue Sabour or The Patience Stone to which one can pour one's heart out without any inhibitions. She feels herself recounting to him her deepest feelings and secrets to a great cathartic and therapeutic effect.

    The movie, in most part, is a monologue, by the woman played by Golshifteh Farahani, confiding her secrets to her husband. The marvellous actress delivers a stellar performance which is the keystone holding the entire movie together. In a performance that straddles a whole spectrum of emotions, she forges an immediate and compelling connect with the viewers and keeps them emotionally invested in the story.

    Writer/Director Atiq Rahimi provides snapshots of the social and political conditions of the region. While Farahani's narrative reveals the ultra conservative male dominated society with little, if any, freedom or respect for women, her travails during the ongoing war point to the existential crisis that hounds the populace there.
    7whatalovelypark

    Worth watching if you're interested in human behaviour

    Universities across the world put forward that humans choose their own partner and marriage, and that everyone is the same as a Western person. Yet we know that this isn't the case.

    This film presents the life of an Afghan woman, who is in an arranged marriage, and if he dies, she will simply be married off to one of his brothers. It's an environment where there is no love between husband and wife. The film gives a rare presentation of the lives of women in the non-Western world. It's probably the best film I've seen to do this. Actress Golshifteh Farahani does a great job of presenting the material in a warm and likable fashion.

    It's worth watching and thinking about. A little slow, but very well made, scripted and acted. Very watchable.

    If you're interested in what life is like for non-Western women, it's definitely worth seeing.
    7rmax304823

    This Woman Has Stones.

    Man, does this sound like a loser -- a woman tends her unconscious husband at home and heaps all of her grief and sorrow on the poor guy's insensible bald head. A Lifetime Movie Network special, right? But no! I was caught up in it at once and couldn't break away. The wife is in her mid-thirties and, while by no means glamorized, has attractive features, striking. Somebody should paint her portrait.

    But nobody will because she, her older husband, and their two little girls live in a shabby apartment in some unnamed city in the Middle East. They depend on a water bearer, who may or may not show up because the dusty streets are dangerous, what with the militia on one side and the rebels on the other. They have no electricity either and live by lamplight at night, when they dare turn it on at all.

    If she goes out, she wears a mustard-colored burqa, which had always impressed me as a heavy garment made of something like canvas but is actually a thin, silken, all-around cape that's easily slipped back onto the shoulders. The woman has few friends -- one of her neighbors has gone round the bend because the men of her house have been slaughtered and hung upside down -- and her only relative is an older aunt who runs a whorehouse. There is a Mullah who knocks at the gate from time to time but he's extremely demanding and his predictions are wrong, so she turns him away.

    After the first two or three minutes, it lost any resemblance to a Lifetime Movie Network special. When the rebels (or the militia, I couldn't tell which) break into her apartment, she hides the wounded husband in a cubby hole to keep him from being killed. When the two armed and ugly men begin to take an interest in her she lies and claims to be one of her aunt's prostitutes, which disgusts the men to the extent that they leave her impure body alone. Well, except that the younger of the two -- an inexperience young man with a stutter -- returns later, flings a handful of bills on the floor, throws her down among them, pulls off their hampering undergarments, and achieves intromission and ejaculation at almost the same instant. "Is this your first time?", she asks wonderingly, and he nods.

    Thereafter he appears with some regularity desiring her services. He even secretly leaves a small bandanna-wrapped pile of food on their window sill. He's gotten to kind of like her, despite her professed profession. She rather appreciates his coming too -- not just for the money, which buys them food and water, but because he's so shy and inexperienced that she can guide him in foreplay and tell him what to do to give her pleasure. She begins to groom herself more carefully and, anticipating his arrival, she dresses in becoming clothes instead of her usual rags.

    That brings us back to the balding husband, flat on his back, a bullet in his neck, the result of a personal quarrel. She's keeping him alive through a tube running from a drip sack nailed to the wall -- just water and sugar. And just how did hubby treat her, even since he married her when she was fifteen? Like an animal. The more beans she spills, the more we realize how complicated, how adversarial, their relationship was. He'd never kissed her or fondled her. The woman's job was to produce children. After the first months of their marriage, his family began to think she was sterile, when in fact it was he who was shooting blanks. Consequently, she allowed herself to be secretly impregnated by two other men.

    The title, "The Patience Stone," refers to a legend in which a character confesses all her grief to a stone and when the stone finally shatters, she's freed of all her guilt and sorrow. It plays into the movie's climactic scene, which I won't describe.

    The acting is as good as it is in any Hollywood movie, the setting is evocative, and all the elements fit together properly. It's pretty well done. You're not likely to be bored.

    But I have to add two observations. The voices tell me to do it. I know two anthropologists who have done field work in Middle Eastern cultures. One told me that she'd met a middle-aged lady who had never had a period because she was constantly made pregnant by her husband. Another told me that the burqa is not a particularly good way of hiding a woman's beauty from the boys on the street corners, who sometimes whistled when a woman wearing a tent passed by. They muttered, "Wow -- look at those FEET!" And why not? The feet are the windows of the soul. So it is written.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The official entry of Afghanistan to the Best Foreign Language Film of the 85th Academy Awards 2013.

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 20, 2013 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Germany
      • United Kingdom
      • Afghanistan
    • Language
      • Persian
    • Also known as
      • The Patience Stone
    • Filming locations
      • Morocco
    • Production companies
      • The Film
      • Razor Film Produktion GmbH
      • Corniche Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $148,671
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,361
      • Aug 18, 2013
    • Gross worldwide
      • $654,587
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 42 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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