THE SEED OF THE SACRED FIG (SFF 2024)


Finally, I get to see a film at this year’s Sydney Film Festival that contains real depth, urgency and socio-political commentary.

Iman (Missagh Zare) is an investigator who works for the government and struggles with the seemingly arbritrary death warrants he is required to sign, his wife Najmeh (Soheila Golestani) is fully supportive of him as she is looking after her two daughters, Rezvan (Mahsa Rostami) and Sana (Setareh Maleki) who have begun to question the theocratic regime that seems to be indiscriminately attacking students. When Iman’s government issued gun goes missing he begins to suspect his family leading to a showdown that is both allegorical, tense and threatens to rip them apart.

Directed by Iranian director, Mohammad Rasoulof, who has recently been convicted for dissidence, speaking out against the government and was sentenced to 8 years and a flogging.
(A flogging!!!!!! it’s 2024, not AD24).

He managed to escape from Iran via an extreme and gruelling journey to travel to Germany and managed to attend the Canned Film Festival where his film was nominated for a Palme D’Or and was awarded a Special Jury Prize.

The film was previously smuggled out of Iran and edited by Andrew Bird, who had worked with Rasoulof before and he added in real life footage found from social media of the ‘Women, Life, Freedom’ protests in Iran that erupted after the death of Masha Amini in 2022.
The instagram footage brings it all to the forefront and is an incredibly powerful addition to the narrative.

Misagh Zare as Iman and Soheila Golestani as Najmeh in The Seed of the Sacred Fig

Missagh Zare as Iman and Soheila Golestani as Najmeh in The Seed of the Sacred Fig

Like his contemporary Jafar Panahi, whose film ‘This is Not a Film’ was also smuggled out of Iran, Rasoulof is making films against ALL the odds, a theocratic government who have little sympathy for the artist or, indeed the truth.
It’s God’s way or the highway according to the current government and this usually leads to execution.

Interrogation in The Seed of the Sacred Fig

Interrogation in The Seed of the Sacred Fig

This is why film, and art in general is so so important, nay imperative.

The world is changing and in the last 20 odd years with the proliferation of social media and the WORLD wide web, people’s stories are finally being heard.
This needs to be recorded and thanks to incredibly brave director’s like Rasoulof, they are. 

These are the true heroes.
Art as resistance. Art as a means to change.

172 Minutes

SUJO (SFF 2024)


A young boy in a remote Mexican village is left an orphan as his sicario father is murdered and so goes to live with his aunt in the isolated countryside in order for him to survive and escape his fate. He is visited by his other aunt and her two children who are as close to brothers to him. When he reaches his teens the allure to join the cartel back in town is strong.

The film is a slow but engaging and moving portrait of life in a cartel run area and the difficulties that young boys face with few options but to join the gangs.

The young Sujo with his father Josie the Eighth

The young Sujo with his father Josie the Eighth

There is a humanity to this film directed and written by longtime collaborators and Mexican filmmakers, Astrid Rondero and Fernanda Valadez who have worked together for over 15 years. Sujo has already won several prizes at film festivals around the world including the coveted Sundance Grand Jury Prize.

This is not your ordinary cartel film, there is little violence shown on screen, instead it is a moving portrait of a young boy who grows up navigating life when everything seems to be against him. 

Kevin Aguilar as the young Sujo

Kevin Aguilar as the young Sujo

Rounder and Valadez manage to elicit performances from the kids especially Juan Jesùs Varela as the titular character and Susan played by Sandra Lorenzano, who is actually a teacher who works at the University of Mexico.

Will Sujo escape the violence that took his father’s life
along with many others in this world?

126 Minutes