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tehranbureau An independent source of news on Iran and the Iranian diaspora

'Whatever You Want'

by FARZAM SHAHSAVARI in London

06 Apr 2010 23:443 Comments

2491383909_fbcebfac56_b.jpgThis past July in Tehran, I went to see Tehran Has No More Pomegranates at Azadi Cinema, which was excellent. As I walked out of the theater, I realized that my cellphone had dropped out of my pocket. When I went back inside to find it, the ticket collector had me sit in the back of the theater while he went off in search of my phone. Meanwhile, another movie had started. It was called "Whatever You Want."

In the opening scene, a mid-aged man in his 50s is driving a cab in the streets of Tehran. A girl in skimpy hijab (with loudly-dyed blond hair tucked under a scarf) hails the cab. The cab stops. Unexpectedly for us (and the driver), she takes the seat next to him, rather than the one in the back, as decorum dictates.

The man turns to her: "Where are you headed, Miss?"

"Wherever you wish to take me," she replies coyly.

Woah! Hold it right here, I say to myself. I am in Tehran and this is the year 2009. Ershad, the Islamic Republic's Ministry of Guidance and Culture, has never been so harsh on Iranian artists and writers in 20 years. Yet here we are with this B-rate "comedy" so unbelievably explicitly insinuating sex and prostitution, and making it look fun too. I brace myself.

The cab driver turns to the camera and gives the audience the sleaziest of winks.

The movie cuts to the next scene, indoors. We are inside a small, not-regularly-inhabited but furnished and slightly messy apartment. The door is opened and our couple walk in. The man is holding two plastic bags full of chips, yogurt, soft drinks, pretzels -- snacks conspicuously associated with drinking alcohol in Tehran. He might as well have brought two bottles of Absolut Vodka with him. (But then again, we all know they are in the fridge.)

He puts the bags on the kitchen table.

"Sorry for the mess," the man says. From this we are meant to construe that this is not our hero's first time bringing blond beauties to this apartment in the middle of a working day. I am impressed. We should all be.

The girl is not flustered at all. "No worries, honey," she says.

The man locks the apartment door and announces assertively but cautiously (if that kind of tone is possible, it is only possible in Farsi): "We are not going anywhere for the next 48 hours!"

"Only 48 hours? Is that all?"

"No, my dear! We will stay as long as you want." The sentence echoes the movie's theme for the second time in five minutes. Everything about this movie is loud, obnoxious, and obvious.

I am speechless. I have never witnessed such a scene in a cinema of the Islamic Republic. Never. But even bigger surprises are to come.

The girl looks around and casually asks: "So which one's your bedroom?"

The man is beside himself with joy. Hardly able to contain his excitement, he points to somewhere outside the camera frame. The girl turns around, looks at the man, gives the subtlest hint of a sniff and asks: "Honey, do you want to take a shower first?"

I cannot believe my eyes. I look around and see families among the audience -- children of all ages sitting next to their parents -- hypnotized by the magic of the silver screen. They are not even blinking. I am reminded that Ershad is an all-or-nothing system. Either everybody gets to watch the film, or no one can. But what is it here in this movie that is supposed to entertain these children? One wonders.

The girl shuts the door and exits the frame. Meanwhile, the man has started getting naked in full view as if his life depends on taking a shower as quickly as possible. Off go the jacket and the shirt on the sofa and the man exits the frame towards the bathroom. We are left with a view of the sofa now receiving the man's underwear.

At this point, the same coincidence that brought me back to this movie theater beckons me out. I have my cellphone back and friends are waiting. Outside, the even more exciting and forbidding streets of Tehran awaited.

Copyright © 2010 Tehran Bureau

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3 Comments

interesting...what was the title in farsi?

[It's هر چی تو بخوای -- Har Chi To Bekhay.]

Anonymous / April 7, 2010 3:49 AM

For those interested in what happens later, here it is:


--- SPOILER WARNING ---


She sneaks out with his car keys when he's showering, and takes the car to what looks like her criminal dealers.

--------------------------


Googling the title in the first reply results in a site that hast he movie available for d/l and steaming, I just watched the first few minutes. The scene in this article is the beginning of the movie.

GeneralOreo / April 7, 2010 1:15 PM

It should not be a surprise that the regime will allow anything that can make feel people feel debased and consider themselves "sinful".
This is a classic strategy that has worked for ever, especially in dictatorial and corrupt regimes, which put the population in a situation that it has to steal, cheat, and act against its own principles just to survive.
When a population feels guilty, it will have no moral incentive or stance to complain against the masters who are also corrupt.
In the populace's mind, it is just a matter of scale. The big guys are just more clever, but they are only stealing, like us. We are all bad, so, what can I complain about.
A clear example is how it works so wonderfully in the West, today. We don't complain against the bankers taking risks with our money because we accept loans that are risky and beyond our means too. The population is told that it is thus guilty, and so are the banker. So, don't complain. You are part of the problem.
The fact that the population was duped into this game and, and hence set into a frame of mind to believe that it is as guilty as the bankers, escapes all analysis.
So, as long as a movie doesn't question the authorities' corruption, it is OK. Especially if it titillates and makes the average religious person feel guilty, then it works to the benefit of the regime. Great psychology at work, guilty of seeking pleasure and guilty of taking petty bribes at work, and cheating to just get by. So, go home and pray.

nassim sabba / April 7, 2010 7:01 PM

  

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