Related Topics |
|
Release Date: 2008 Duration: 90 min Cast: Nahid Persson Sarvestani, Empress Farah Categories: Movies, Culture & Society, Biography, World cinema, Documentary "When Nahid Persson Sarvestani, an Iranian exile, set out to make a documentary about Farrah, the wife of the shah of Iran, she expected to encounter her opposite. As a child, Persson Sarvestani had lived in dire poverty, watching Farrah’s wedding as if it were a fairy tale. As a teenager, she joined the Communist faction of Khomeini’s revolution that deposed the shah, sending him and his... MORE "When Nahid Persson Sarvestani, an Iranian exile, set out to make a documentary about Farrah, the wife of the shah of Iran, she expected to encounter her opposite. As a child, Persson Sarvestani had lived in dire poverty, watching Farrah’s wedding as if it were a fairy tale. As a teenager, she joined the Communist faction of Khomeini’s revolution that deposed the shah, sending him and his family volleying from country to country. When Khomeini betrayed his promise for democracy, imposing more violent measures than the shah had, Persson Sarvestani was also forced to flee. Thirty years later, she needs key questions answered and goes directly to the source. Surprisingly, Queen Farrah welcomes her as a fellow refugee from their beloved homeland, granting unprecedented access. Over the next year and a half, Persson Sarvestani enters the queen’s world, planning to challenge the shah’s ideology; instead, she must rethink her own. When Persson Sarvestani’s prior opposition to the shah surfaces, the queen shuts down filming. Yet, in the struggle to understand each other’s experiences, an unlikely friendship has blossomed. Confronting Farrah about the shah’s repression has become not only a political conflict but a personal one, and Persson Sarvestani’s objectivity is shaken.In this gripping, poignant consideration of subjectivity as truth, we learn that people write history. And can also heal it. The Queen and I couldn’t be more relevant as we reach across our own political aisles." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. LESS |
The Queen and I: The former Head of the British Ar... |
See All |
The Queen and I: The former Head of the British Army As part of a series of interviews to celebrate the Queen's Diamond Jubilee, General Sir Mike Jackson describes to the Telegraph his one-to-one meetings with the Queen about the Armed Forces when he was Chief of the General Staff. From: telegraphtv Views: 5 2 ratings Time: 03:30 More in Entertainment
Other |

Related Topics |
Comments About The Queen and I