Hajji Washington: Difference between revisions
Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0 |
|||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
[[Category:1998 films]] |
[[Category:1998 films]] |
||
[[Category:Films directed by Ali Hatami]] |
[[Category:Films directed by Ali Hatami]] |
||
[[Category:1990s comedy-drama films]] |
|||
[[Category:Iranian comedy films]] |
[[Category:Iranian comedy films]] |
||
[[Category:Iranian drama films]] |
[[Category:Iranian drama films]] |
Revision as of 19:43, 17 March 2020
Hajji Washington | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ali Hatami |
Written by | Ali Hatami |
Produced by | Ali Hatami |
Starring | Ezzatolah Entezami Richard Harrison Mario Diano Mehri Vadadian Esmail Mohammadi |
Cinematography | Mehrdad Fakhimi |
Edited by | Musa Afshar |
Music by | Mohammad Reza Lotfi |
Release dates | Completed 1982 Released 1998 |
Running time | 98 min. |
Country | Iran |
Language | Persian |
Hajji Washington (Template:Lang-fa) is an Iranian comedy/drama film directed by Ali Hatami. The film is a fictionalized account of Iran's first ambassador to the United States, Haji Washington. Filmed in Italy (filling in for Washington, D.C.) and Ghazali Cinematic Mini-City in 1982, Haji Washington was not publicly screened in Iran until 1998.[1][failed verification] The film's music is by the late Persian classical musician Mohammad Reza Lotfi.[2]
Plot
A fictionalized account of the first Iranian ambassador in the United States, Hajji Hossein-Gholi Noori, a loyal Qajar statesman who goes to Washington to found the embassy. After meeting with President Grover Cleveland, Haji proudly rents a mansion and hires several servants and staff, however there are no Iranians in Washington and the embassy does not have any visitors.[3][failed verification] Haunted by nostalgia for home and his beloved daughter, Haji becomes plagued by nightmares. In his reports to the King, he writes exaggerated narrations of his activities using grandiose ornamented language. Funds dwindle and the embassy begins to disintegrate; the staff leaves and Haji's dialogue with the King slowly declines into a personal monologue. One night president Cleveland shows up in the embassy. An excited Haji entertains his guest single-handedly while dreaming of writing another grandiose letter to the King of Persia only to learn that his guest is no longer president of United States, but a simple farmer who wants to learn how to grow pistachios. Not long after, a Native American enters the embassy to seek asylum and a friendship grows despite their inability to communicate. Haji refuses to handover the refugee and is removed from his post. Haji, now in the state of madness and absolute silence, boards the boat to return home.[4][5]
References
External links