Eye For Film >> Movies >> Gaze (2017) Film Review
Gaze
Reviewed by: Andrew Robertson
A woman on a bus, at night - late shifts this week, and next. There's a digression to be made about the liminal spaces of public transport and film, about depictions of the disadvantaged and disenfranchised and discriminated-against as they journey by coach, one that runs from the concrete racism of New York civil-engineering to the dancing raindrops on a window in The Shape Of Water. That can wait. On her way home, Pedram Ansari's worried mother cannot, eventually.
She sees something - as the posters say, says something. There are consequences.
Screening as part of Glasgow's 2018 Short Film Festival's opening gala, What Makes A Glasgow Short?, festival director Matt Lloyd had observed that Iranian film is just better than other film - it's sometimes hard to argue with that contention, and Negah/Gaze is one of those times. There are faces that will be familiar - Babak Karimi is the bus driver, and while you might know him from A Separation, I'm fonder of his turn (and turns) in Fish & Cat. He's more ancillary here, a tiny outpost of authority, but it ends where the bus stops. Everything rests on Ansari - in gesture and step, in glance, in gaze.
Farnoosh Samadi directs, co-writes with frequent collaborator Ali Asgari, and this is yet another example of their award-winning talent. It's a minimal piece, a single journey, but that gets you Odyssey and Anabasis, Thelma & Louise and Bill & Ted - somewhere differently is this film - one that rewards observation, invites speculation, a film not just subtitled but that invites reading.
Reviewed on: 15 Mar 2018