At this time, many young Iranians all over this world are watching us, and I imagine them to be very happy. They are happy not just because of an important award, or a film or a filmmaker, but because at the time, in talk of war, intimidation and aggressions exchanged between politicians, the name of their country, Iran, is spoken here through her glorious culture — a rich and ancient culture that has been hidden under the heavy dust of politics. I proudly offer this award to the people of my country. A people who respect all cultures and civilizations, and despise hostility and resentment.
(Source: deathinspring)
Simin’s and Nader’s divorce debate is the first of many complex issues raised and passionately argued in A Separation. In that opening scene, filmed as one four-minute shot, Simin and Nader argue their case directly to the camera, as if the director is instructing the moviegoer to be the judge in a matter of Solomonic import and delicacy — and in that rare film that escapes the usually trim narrative confines of the screen and lodges and lives in the minds of viewers. For days after seeing the movie, you may continue to mull and debate its dilemmas.
“I think it’s insulting to an audience to make them sit and watch a film,” Farhadi has said, “and then give them a message in one sentence.” A Separation raises a host of questions — about family, class, religion and, implicitly, politics — and lets the viewer decide. The film is no art-house conundrum, teasing viewers by withholding information, but an acknowledgment that, in life more than films, people have profound if not always valid reasons for their behavior. In the urgent clash of actions and personalities, almost everyone can be mostly right and crucially, culpably wrong.
—Richard Corliss, TIME (x)

Ashgar Farhadi and Peyman Moadi accepting the Golden Globe for Best Foreign Film (A Separation)
A world-class masterpiece. Flawlessly crafted, brilliantly performed, and elegantly photographed —The Wall Street Journal
Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation serves as a quiet reminder of how good it’s possible for movies to be. —Slate
Farhadi is no mere formalist. His film is a spiritual investigation into the rise of women and the descent of male privilege in Iran, and a look at the toll that has taken. In a movie of flawless acting, it is Moadi - terse, proud, angry, haunted - who shows us that rare thing: a soul in transition. —Entertainment Weekly
A Separation is not the work of a constrained artist. It’s a great movie in which the full range of human interaction seems to play itself out before our eyes. —Christian Science Monitor
Something close to a contemporary masterwork, and maybe the best foreign-language film of the year, right at the tail end. —Salon
A Separation is totally foreign and achingly familiar. It’s a thrilling domestic drama that offers acute insights into human motivations and behavior as well as a compelling look at what goes on behind a particular curtain that almost never gets raised. —Los Angeles Times

What is wrong is wrong, no matter who said it or where it’s written.
-(جدایی نادر از سیمین (A Separation), 2011) | 365 Films
(Source: deathinspring)


Favourite Movies in 2011: 01. A Separation / 02. Weekend / 03. Attack the Block / 04. We Need to Talk About Kevin / 05. Midnight in Paris / 06. Martha Marcy May Marlene / 07. Bridesmaids / 08. Like Crazy
Great Films of 2011
A Separation (جدایی نادر از سیمین) // dir. Asghar Farhadi
As of its opening day, A Separation is the highest rated 2011 film on IMDb, best reviewed 2011 film on Rotten Tomatoes, second-best reviewed 2011 film on Metacritic (and best reviewed non-documentary) and has the highest BFCA rating of 2011.