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It Was Just An Accident, Overrated, Underwhelming

Rating: ** ½
Jafar Panahi,  the controversial Iranian filmmaker,  has to be right in whatever  he does. He is , after all, an anti-establishment  filmmaker haunted and jailed in  Iran.

So let’s say,  if Pahani made Dhurandhar, it  would no longer be  considered  a propaganda film by the right wingers, but an anti-establishment  film masquerading as  propaganda.

 Jafar Panahi’s latest work is at best bold  and subversive. Is that enough reason  to applaud and  eulogize the  film, and award  it the highest honour at the Cannes Film Festival?

 I am  afraid I found  It Is Just An Accident  to be a bit of damper. It is shot  with minimal menace and a lot of suppressed anger  trying to  whitewash itself with laughter. We are taken  on a car ride  with  an Establishment  man Iqbaal who  has in the past probably tortured  a  bunch of rebels who are now trying to re-establish  their lives in posture of  normalcy.

 We first have Vahid( Vahid Mobasseri) capturing and  trying to  bury  the man Iqbaal he suspects to be his torturer. To be  sure that  it is indeed the  man he is looking for, Vahid drives down to  meet other purported  victims of  torture by the  same man(small world!) whose  only  means of identifying their  torturer  Iqbaal is the  sound of his  prosthetic  leg.

 All this sounds poignant and dramatic on paper. But the execution of the  suspect’s true  identity is long-drawn  and  bereft of  the  humour and  irony , rather the humour  OF the irony,that director Jafar Panahi aims for.

The treatment  of the potentially tense topic is  turgid  and lacklustre. Nowhere  did I feel involved with the  Shakespearean  predicament  of  the  torture survivors—to  snuff or not to snuff–not even when Shiva(Mariam  Afshari)  speaks graphically  of her  torture.

Shiva speaks as if it happened to someone  else.The out-of-body  experience  is compounded when the  revenge seekers suddenly turn  into a malenge of melodramatic  human beings,  taking Iqbal’s pregnant wife to the hospital, looking after  his daughter, etc.

   I won’t say  this political drama is  guilty of  over-sentimentalizing the  victims of political  atrocities. But the  storytelling lacks bite. It’s not as  though  the director, known for his  outspokenness, doesn’t leg the  extra  mile. What  stops Panahi from achieving the  full potential  of  the subject is his endeavour to reach out  to a global audience.  The  effort seems  diluted, if not compromised.

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