| Film Review: Snowman (Adam Barfi - 1995)
Directed by
Davood Mir-Bagheri 
Genre: Comedy / Drama / Romance
Cast (in credits order)
Akbar Abdi .... Abbas
Dariush Arjmand .... Esi Khan
Parviz Parastui .... Javad
Azita Hajian .... Woman in the Hotel
Mohamad Reza Sharifinia .... Ali Kopol
Original Music by....
Farhad Fakhredini
Makeup....
Abdollah Eskandari
Plot Outline: A Iranian man (Akbar Abdi) stuck in Turkey, desperately wants to get a VISA to go to America. He starts dressing up as a woman in hopes of marrying an American man to get American citizenship, but he starts having doubts and...
More information at imdb.com
*********************************************
From HOMAN's Articles Archive
*********************************************
Transvestite Film Draws Militant Fire
12.42 p.m. ET (1742 GMT) December 15, 1997
Reuters / Fox News.
TEHRAN — A film about an Iranian who resorts to cross-dressing in an effort
to emigrate to the United States has come under fire from Islamic militants
opposed to the government's liberal policies permitting the screening.
Residents and newspapers said groups of militants over the past week
attacked cinemas showing the Iranian film "Snowman" in several cities,
including Isfahan, Shiraz and Rasht.
The daily newspaper Salam said a group of militants from the Ansar-e
Hizbollah (Supporters of God's Party) attacked viewers leaving a cinema in
Isfahan, including a disabled veteran from the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war.
The violence was the latest in a series of recent incidents across the
Islamic republic in which militants attacked cinemas showing the film.
The actions target attempts by the new moderate President Mohammad Khatami
to ease censorship and fly in the face of his stated policies to reinforce
the rule of law in Iran.
The black comedy, directed by Davoud Mirbaqeri and called Adam Barfi in
Persian, shows a man disguising himself as a woman with heavy make-up in the
hope of marrying an American and emigrating to the country of his dreams.
It has been attacked as immoral by the militants, despite its politically
correct ending in which the man falls in love with an Iranian woman and both
return to their homeland.
The daily Salam said militants in Isfahan tore down posters at the cinema
and stopped the screening of "Snowman."
"Although the film is authorized and is being shown in 22 cities throughout
Iran, the attackers threatened to set the cinema on fire so we were forced
to stop showing it," the manager of Qods cinema in Isfahan told Salam.
The film is being shown in 18 cinemas in Tehran alone, where tickets have
been sold out for several days in advance.
Iran's Culture and Islamic Guidance Minister Ataollah Mohajerani authorized
the showing of "Snowman," which his predecessor had banned.
Asked about the incident in Isfahan, Mohajerani said police later detained
the troublemakers, who had acted illegally, and the cinema had reopened. He
said such incidents were good publicity for the film, Iran's top box office
hit this year.
But Salam on Saturday quoted Ayatollah alaleddin Taheri, a moderate senior
cleric who leads Friday prayers in Isfahan, as criticizing police,
intelligence ministry and provincial officials for not putting a stop to
instances of militants taking the law into their own hands.
In related incidents, Salam said Ansar-e Hizbollah members stormed the
Guidance Ministry headquarters in Isfahan on Tuesday, threatening female
staff. The office's director-general had filed a lawsuit against the
intruders, it said.
The group also attacked the Sadr theology school in Isfahan the following
day, beating up two clerics and damaging the school, the paper said.
"We have identified the members of the group and informed the police," a
security official told Salam.
Ansar-e Hizbollah members have also recently attacked the offices of Salam
and Navid magazine in Isfahan, a library at Isfahan university, and the
houses of a clergyman and a university lecturer, the daily said.
|