Time: Friday, February 6th 2004, 6:30pm
Place: De Anza College - Hinson Campus Center, Conference Rooms A&B
21250 Stevens Creek Blvd. Cupertino, CA 95014
http://www.deanza.edu/map/directions.html
A Lecture by Homer Abramian
A brief look at the teachings of Zarathushtra (Zoroaster), philosopher, teacher, and profit of 2000 B.C., through the eyes of 21st century.
Zarathushtra's is a message about human progression towards self-realization, natural harmony and completeness, as a good creation of the good God.
It is a message of freedom to choose, equality, human rights, environmental consciousness, and change towards all around progress.
… the invitation of Zarathushtra:
"Hear the best with your ears and ponder with a bright mind. Then each man and woman, for his or her self, select either of the two. Awaken to this Doctrine before the Great Event of Choice ushers in."
Gathas, Song 3:2
Mr. Abramian is a scholar of religious studies and has spent the last 40 years researching the essence of the major world religions. In addition, he has also mastered the Shahnameh, which is regarded as the masterpiece of Persian history and literature.
Feb 6 2004 7:00pm
California Film Institute, 38 Miller Avenue Suite 6, Mill Valley, California 94941 USA info@cafilm.org
http://cafilm.org/index.html
Banned by Iranian authorities, the directorial debut of veteran producer Manijeh Hekmat vividly dramatizes turbulent times in Iranian history through the eyes of female prison inmates. Beginning her tale in 1984 with the arrival of tough new warden Tahereh (Roya Taym-ourian), Hekmat continues in 1992 and 2001, tracing the warden’s charged relationship with Mitra (Roya Nanahali), who is serving a life sentence for killing her violent stepfather. Touching on such taboo topics as political activism, corruption, prostitution, drug use and homosexuality, this fascinating film also casts Pegah Ahangarani in multiple roles representing the changing situation of Iranian youth through the years. In Farsi with English subtitles. (Iran, 2002) 106 min.
Friday February 6 2004, 7:30PM ( Buy ticket )
> DANCING IN THE DUST
(Raghs Dar Ghober)
(2003) Directed by Asghar Farhadi
Although DANCING IN THE DUST begins as a heartfelt melodrama about a
youthful marriage gone awry, things really get interesting when the
immature groom finds himself unexpectedly stranded in the desert.
With a grizzled and taciturn snake hunter his only companion and
guide-and his only chance to make it back to civilization alive-our
protagonist finds himself forced to grow up fast. As the two men from
different generations alternately spar and attempt to bond, the
stakes continue to rise until the standoff is interrupted by a life-
or-death emergency. The result is a haunting examination of wasted
lives and second chances.
Producer: Iraj Taghipour. Screenplay: Asghar Farhadi.
Cinematographer: Hassan Karimi. Editor: Saeed Shahsavari. Cast:
Faramarz Gharibian, Yousef Khodaparast, Baran Kosari, Jalal Sarhad-
Seraj. Presented in Farsi dialogue with English subtitles. 35mm, 95
min.
>>> UCLA PERSIAN FILM FEST
1.7.04 - 2.11.04
UCLA Film and Television Archive & The Bijan Amin and Soraya Amin
Foundation present
14TH ANNUAL CELEBRATION OF IRANIAN CINEMA
Like the nation it reflects so vividly and thoughtfully, Iranian
cinema is at a crossroads. Iran has an overwhelmingly young
population, and almost all of the selections in this survey of recent
Iranian filmmaking concern a generation of young people dissatisfied
with their present situation and uncertain about the future. In very
different ways, LETTERS IN THE WIND and DEEP BREATH movingly and
excitingly depict protagonists caught between adolescent rebellion
and the search for a place in society. Similarly, a new generation of
filmmakers is emerging as the trickle of titles distributed
independently grows to a flood. Like LETTERS IN THE WIND, TEHRAN,
7:00 A.M. is a first film from this independent movement, and like
DEEP BREATH, it represents a break with the kind of filmmaking that
foreign viewers typically associate with Iranian cinema. Instead of
pastoral lyricism or poetic neorealism, these films focus on the
pleasures and displeasures of everyday urban life.
The tradition in Iranian cinema of combining keenly observed realism
and symbolic allegory continues with another first film, DANCING IN
THE DUST. Yet another first feature, BLACK TAPE, combines two
concerns of recent Iranian cinema-the place of women and the place of
the dispossessed Kurds-but with a harsh contemporary edge unusual in
the films from the 1990s that put Iranian cinema on the map. Our
opening night film, CRIMSON GOLD, is a collaboration between two
acknowledged masters, Abbas Kiarostami (TEN) and Jafar Panahi (THE
CIRCLE). This film too is concerned about dehumanizing forces in
Iranian society. It is a concern with global resonance.
Special thanks to: Mark Amin; Bo Smith, Lori Donnelly-Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston; -Gene Siskel Film Center, Chicago; Tom Vick-Freer and
Sackler Galleries, Smithsonian Institution; B鲩nice Reynaud-REDCAT;
Zareh Arevshatian.
All films in Farsi with English subtitles.
Join DJ Masood, DJ Dr T, DJ Raffy @ Club Avalon
on Friday, Feb 6 for a FUNDRAISING EVENT FOR BAM
Where: Club Avalon, 777 Lawrence Expressway, Santa Clara
When: Feb 6, 9 pm-2 am
Donation: $20 minimum
100% of proceeds will go to the Earthquake Relief Fund for Orphans through NIAC.For more detail please logon to http://www.glowinthedarkparty.com