
We continue our Middle East Film series with Bashu: The Little Stranger, directed by Bahram Beizai, shown in Persian language with English subtitles. The film was voted the "Best Iranian Film of all time" in 1999 by a Persian movie magazine. This film was the first Iranian film to use Gilaki, the northern language of Iran, in a serious context rather than merely for comic relief.
Film description: During the Iran-Iraq War, Bashu, a young boy loses his house and all his family. Scared, he sneaks into a truck that is leaving the area. He gets off the truck in the Northern part of the country, where everything from landscape to language is different. He meets Naii, who is trying to raise her two young children on a farm, while her husband is away. Despite cultural differences, and the fact that they do not speak the same language, Bashu and Naii slowly form a strong bond.
This series is presented by the Middle East Studies section of the OSU Library, and the NELC department, with refreshments generously supplied by the Middle East Studies Center. Please visit the Middle East Studies Library's website for information on more Arabic, Persian, and Turkish films to be shown this year.