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Article 5

Children of Heaven
A Review by ROGER EBERT 


"Children of Heaven'' is very nearly a perfect movie for children, and of  course that means adults will like it, too. It lacks the cynicism and smart-mouth  attitudes of so much American entertainment for kids and glows with a kind of  good-hearted purity. To see this movie is to be reminded of a time when the  children in movies were children and not miniature stand-up comics.

The movie is from Iran. Immediately you think kids would not be  interested in such a movie. It has subtitles. Good lord! Kids will have to read them!  But its subtitles are easy for 8- or 9-year-olds, who can whisper them to  their siblings, and maybe this is their perfect introduction to subtitles. As for  Iran: The theme of this movie is so universal there is not a child who will  not be wide-eyed with interest and suspense. 

The film is about a boy who loses his sister's shoes. He takes them to  the cobbler for repairs, and on the way home, when he stops to pick up vegetables for his mother, a blind trash collector accidentally carries them away. Of  course, the boy, named Ali, is afraid to tell his parents. Of course, his  sister, named Zahra, wants to know how she is supposed to go to school without  shoes. The children feverishly write notes to each other, right under their  parent's noses. 

The answer is simple: Zahra will wear Ali's sneakers to school every  morning, and then run home so that Ali can put them on for his school in the  afternoon. But Zahra cannot always run fast enough, and Ali, who is a good  student, gets in trouble for being late to class. And there is a heartbreaking scene  where Zahra solemnly regards her own precious lost shoes, now on the feet of  the rag picker's daughter.


I submit that this situation is scarier and more absorbing for children  than a movie about Godzilla or other manufactured entertainments. Even when  you're a kid, you know you're not likely to be squished by a giant lizard, but  losing something that has been entrusted to you? And getting in trouble at  school? That's big time. 

Majid Majidi's film has a wonderful scene where Ali and his father  bicycle from the almost medieval streets and alleys of the old town to the  high-rises and luxury homes where the rich people live. The father hopes for work as  a gardener, but he is intimidated by the challenge of speaking into the  intercoms on the gates of the wealthy. His son jumps in, with offers of pruning,  weeding, spraying and trimming. It is a great triumph. 

And then there is a footrace for the poor children of the quarter. The  winner gets two weeks in a summer camp and other prizes. Ali doesn't care. He  wants to place third, because the prize is a new pair of sneakers, which he  can give to his sister. My guess is that the race and its outcome will be as  exciting for many kids as anything they've seen at the movies. 

"Children of Heaven'' is about a home without unhappiness. About a  brother and sister who love one another, instead of fighting. About situations any  child can identify with. In this film from Iran, I found a sweetness and  innocence that shames the land of Mutant Turtles, Power Rangers and violent video  games. Why do we teach our kids to see through things, before they even learn  to see them?

Ali's Father: Amir Naji
Ali: Mir Farrokh Hashemian
Zahra: Bahare Seddiqi 

Written and directed by Majid Majidi. Running time: 87 minutes 

 

 

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