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The Cow (1969)

4.1 of 5 from 53 ratings
1h 40min
Not released
  • General info
  • Available formats
Synopsis:
'The Cow' has the beauty and simplicity associated with the great films of that movement. In a small village in Iran, Hassan cherishes his cow more than anything in the world. While he is away, the cow mysteriously dies, and the villagers protectively try to convince Hassan the cow has wandered off. Grief stricken, Hassan begins to believe he is his own beloved bovine. 'The Cow' won great acclaim at the Venice Film Festival after being smuggled out of Iran in 1971, and was twice voted the best Iranian film ever made by a survey of Iranian film critics...
Actors:
Ezzatolah Entezami, Mahin Shahabi, , Jamshid Mashayekhi, , Jafar Vali, Khosrow Shojazadeh, , Esmat Safavi, , Parviz Fanizadeh
Directors:
Writers:
Dariush Mehrjui, Gholam-Hossein Saedi
Aka:
Gaav
Genres:
Drama
Countries:
Iran
BBFC:
Release Date:
Not released
Run Time:
100 minutes
Subtitles:
English
DVD Regions:
Region 1
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Full Screen 1.33:1 / 4:3
Colour:
B & W

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Reviews (1) of The Cow

Harbinger Of The Greatness To Come. - The Cow review by NC

Spoiler Alert
24/10/2018

'A landmark of world cinema', the Iranian actor and comedian Omid Djalili says, and he is right. Seen by many as the first great Iranian film, it certainly contains the ingredients of all the colossal masterpieces which were to follow right up to the present day. Astonishing camerawork, the long take, the perfect pace of each shot, an eye for what will make a breathtaking image. Most important of all, the one thing that elevates iranian cinema above the rest of the world: the humane element. Ordinary people trying to work out a problem that becomes extraordinary to them precisely because they are ordinary. It's a simple device, but Iranian directors have made it work so many times, and somehow they do it far, far better than film-makers from other nations.

'The Cow' is not quite on the same stratospheric level as, say, the films of the Makhmalbafs or Jafar Panahi. It doesn't have their concision. Very rarely, when watching an Iranian film, does it seem slow, but I couldn't help thinking it would be a better film at 15 minutes shorter. And it doesn't have their simplicity - the other essential component which makes Iranian cinema unique. I feel there is some deeper meaning behind the story of a man so in love with his cow that when he loses it, he becomes the animal. Rather the cow lives than he himself. I couldn't, and still can't, work out what that deeper meaning might be.

Nevertheless, this is, for by far the most part, a superb work of art. 'A landmark in world cinema'.

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