“Love does not consist of gazing at each other,
but in looking together in the same
direction.” ~ Antoine de Saint-Exupery
The ability to see events from different
perspectives is one of the most important
elements of a successful relationship, whether
it involves a married couple, a parent and
child, or a group of nations. Warring parties
are always convinced that they have right or, in
some cases, God on their side. To them, every
action they take is fully justified and every
act the other party takes is sinister. The
failure to see other people's perspectives is in
full view in Asqhar Farhadi's brilliant A
Separation, winner of the Best Foreign Film
award at the Golden Globes and nominated for an
Oscar in the same category. Farhadi does not ask
us to choose sides but to observe how decisions
made with good intentions and for the alleged
benefit of others often have the opposite
effect.
The film opens in a courtroom in Tehran as Simin
(Leila Hatami) speaks to a judge, unseen by the
camera, asking him to grant her a divorce from
Nader (Peyman Moaadi) her husband of fourteen
years. Simin wants to leave the country and take
her 11-year-old daughter, Termeh (Sarina
Farhadi), with her to seek better opportunities
abroad. Nader, a bank employee, however, will
not leave Iran because of his responsibility to
care for his elderly father (Ali-Asghar
Shahbazi) coping with Alzheimer's disease. Even
though they have been married for fourteen
years, there does not seem to be any hint of
compromise. Unable to obtain the divorce because
the judge deems the issues not “serious” enough,
the couple agrees to separate with Simin going
to her mother's house and Termeh staying with
her father.
To help care for his aging father, the well-off
Nader hires Razieh (Sareh Bayat), a pregnant,
less affluent young woman with a four-year-old
daughter. Whether or not Nader knows she is
pregnant will become a contentious issue later
in the film. Razieh, a devout Muslim, who has
not told her husband Hodjat (Shahab Hosseini)
about her employment, is conflicted when she has
to change the clothes of the incontinent old
man, and feels compelled to ask an Islamic
authority if it would be considered a sin.
Things become even worse when Nader returns from
work and finds his father lying on the floor
barely breathing with Razieh nowhere in sight.
When Razieh returns home after she claimed she
had to do an important errand, an angry Nader
accuses her of stealing money and asks her to
leave immediately.
Resistant to leave, he pushes her out the front
door, causing the pregnant woman to fall down
the stairs. Events begin to spin out of control
when Razieh has a miscarriage and her irate
husband takes Nader to court for murder. As the
case is presented in a preliminary hearing
before a judge, the divide between the families
escalates and each person is guilty of
concealing the truth in order to protect
themselves or a family member. A Separation may
sound like a melodramatic soap opera, but it is
far from it. It is a powerful, realistic, and
beautifully acted drama full of constant tension
and uncertainty, a film in which each person
must confront the fact that the walls they have
erected have not led to nurturing
relationships.
While the film is not overtly political, an
underlying sub-text is the depiction of a
male-dominated autocratic theocracy, a political
system based on force, oppression and the
alienation between gender and class. Eager to
enhance their daughter's education, the couple
hired Miss Ghahraii, a teacher (Merila Zare'i)
from her school to come to their flat to provide
coaching for her upcoming exams, but it is
painfully clear to see how much more she is
respected than Razieh, who stays in the kitchen
during family gatherings. As the adults fight
over perceived injustices, the children, as is
often the case, endure the most pain, conflicted
by their love and dependence on their parents
and their desire for morality and justice.
While Termeh seemingly hides her pain, her face
reflects the terrible burden her parents have
put on her by their inability to see the world
from other points of view, the kind of tragedy
that has plagued mankind for centuries. As
Farhadi has wisely said “What I hope is that the
viewer will not know whose victory to wish for.”
When responsibility, love, and sacrifice are not
present, there can be no victory for anyone.
GRADE: A-