Iranian Film Dir. Majid Majidi |
ALLAHYAR, Iran (AP) — Here in this Persian replica of
Mecca, built at the cost of millions of dollars, an Iranian film company is
attempting to offer the world a literal glimpse of the Prophet Muhammad despite
traditional taboos against it.
The movie "Muhammad, Messenger of God" already recalls
the grandeur — and expense — of a Cecil B. DeMille film, with the narrow
alleyways and a replica Kaaba shrine built here in the remote village of
Allahyar. But by even showing the back of the Prophet Muhammad as a child
before he was called upon by Allah, the most expensive film in Iranian history
already has been criticized before its even widely released, calling into
question who ultimately will see the Quranic story come to life on the big
screen.
"How should we introduce our prophet?" asked Majid
Majidi, the film's director. "Many relay their messages to the world
through cinema and pictures."
In American cinematic history, films involving the Bible often
find the biggest audience and box office returns. Biblical stories have
inspired dozens of films from the 1920s all the way to recent blockbusters like
"Noah" starring Russell Crowe and Ridley Scott's biblical epic
"Exodus: Gods and Kings."
But in Islam, portraying the Prophet Muhammad has long been taboo
for many. Islamic tradition is full of written descriptions of Muhammad and his
qualities — describing him as the ideal human being. But clerics generally have
agreed that trying to depict that ideal is forbidden. The Paris terror attack
on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which killed 12 people in January, saw
gunmen target it over its caricature of the prophet.
But while Sunni Islam, the religion's dominant branch, widely
rejects any depictions of Muhammad, his close relatives or companions, Shiite
Islam doesn't. In Shiite powerhouse Iran and other countries, posters, banners,
jewelry and even keychains bear the images of Muhammad's son-in-law Ali,
revered by Shiites who see him as the prophet's rightful successor. The late
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomenei, who led Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution and later
became the country's supreme leader, reportedly even kept a picture similar to
young Muhammad in his room for years.
In the new 190-minute film, the story focuses on Muhammad's
childhood, never showing his face. The movie instead uses others to tell his
story, like his grandfather Abdul-Muttalib, portrayed by Iranian actor Ali Reza
Shoja Nouri.
"It was a very heavy role," Nouri told The Associated
Press. "I cannot express my feelings about it."
For his vision, Majidi hired Academy Award winning visual effects
supervisor and filmmaker Scott E. Anderson, three-time Oscar-winning Italian
director of photography Vittorio Storaro and music producer Allah-Rakha Rahman,
who won two Academy Awards for his work on "Slumdog Millionaire."
By making a high-quality film, Majidi said it will give the world
the right impression about the Prophet Muhammad. He blamed Islamic extremists
and the West for sullying the image of a pillar of faith for 1.5 billion people
across the world.
"For Muslims, the Prophet Muhammad is a mercy to the world
and the hereafter," he said.
Yet, the film already has seen widespread criticism even before
being widely released, largely from predominantly Sunni Arab countries. In
February, Egypt's Al-Azhar, one of Sunni Islam's most prestigious seats of
learning, called on Iran to ban a film it described as debasing the sanctity of
messengers from God. Meanwhile, the Sunni kingdom of Qatar has announced plans
to have its own $1 billion epic shot on the prophet's life.
Majidi said he would be ready to cooperate with any Islamic
country planning a film on Muhammad.
"We are ready to cooperate to produce any movies to introduce
Muhammad to the world," Majidi said. "We are an Islamic country, we
know the related culture and we have capabilities for production of such
movies."
So far, the film appears to have the support of Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, Iran's current supreme leader, who attended an inauguration of the
film's set in 2012.
Iranian film critics generally have praised the film as well, like
Mostafa Seyedabadi, who declared its color and lighting as
"astonishing," However, critic Masoud Farasati dismissed some of the
film's shots, like a low-angle view of the prophet as a teen against the sky,
as a "Hollywood" knockoff.
Producers plan to ultimately release the film in Arabic, Persian
and English, with showings across Iran and abroad in the summer. Filming took a
year, while postproduction in Germany took two more years. And if this film is
successful, its producers say they hope to film two sequels, one focusing on
Muhammad's life from his teenage years to his 40s and another after 40 when he
became the prophet of Islam.
Mohammad Mahdi
Heidarian, head of the private Nourtaban Film Industry company, said his
company spent about $30 million in total to make the movie. He and others
declined to elaborate on who provided financial backing for it, though there
are wealthy investors and religious institutions in Iran that likely would
support such efforts.
In the past, such religious films have done well in Iran. The 1977
Quranic epic "The Message," starring Anthony Quinn as the uncle of
the unseen and unheard prophet, drew crowds and long lines to movie theaters in
Tehran. And another that did well was DeMille's own 1956 film, "The Ten
Commandments," with Charlton Heston playing the sea-parting prophet Moses.
It's yet to be seen whether Majidi's film will be led into the promised land of
a wide release.
Source +Yahoo News
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