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6 films in package
Norouz: Persian Spring Festival
A short documentary comissioned by the Counsel General in San Francisco, chronicling the traditions and history of Nowruz with rare footage of everyday life of an Iranian American family in the Bay Area in the early 1960s.
The Dawn is Too Far: Stories of Iranian-American Life
The Dawn is Too Far shares a multi-generational perspective of those who came as students, refugees, and exiles to the U.S., particularly in the context of 1979 Iranian Revolution. This film charts the longer history of Iranian Americans in the San Francisco Bay area and the ways they have been impacted and contributed to this region.
Best in the West
Best in the West chronicles multiple journeys and experiences of migration through the decades-long friendships of a group of Iranian men who left Tehran, Iran, for San Francisco in the 1960s-70s. The film locates their personal histories within a geopolitical history of Iran-US oil relations, the Vietnam war, American consumption and inequality, and the soulful musical landscapes of Iran and the Bay Area in the 1960-70s.
Yasamin
An 11-year-old girl named Yasamin has just moved from Iran to Los Angeles amidst the Iranian Hostage Crisis; however, her navigation of the trials and tribulations of assimilation are learned through a single unibrow.
Joonam
Spurred by a provocative family memory and a lifetime of separation from the country her mother left behind, a young filmmaker delves into her mother and grandmother's complicated pasts, and her own fractured Iranian identity.
Untitled, Jackson Heights
An Iranian mother living in Queens sends a letter to her far-away daughter.
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In its 250-year history, the United States has been enormously influenced by Iran's culture and history. Poets like Hafez and Sa'adi guided the words and thoughts of Benjamin Franklin, Henry David Thoreau, and Ralph Waldo Emerson, while Americans like Howard Baskerville played a critical role in the Constitutional Revolution that marked the end of the Qajar Dynasty. KHANEVADE: Portraits of Iranian Americans examines the everyday stories of the Iranians who have rebuilt their lives in the U.S., particularly in the wake of the 1979 Iranian Revolution, and contributed significantly to its civic and cultural life, while navigating questions of belonging and identity.

 

This program spans documentary works shaped by empathetic, quotidian portraits of Iranian American communities. Norouz: Persian Spring Festival is a revealing time capsule of the Bay Area in the 1960s, showcasing the presence of Iranian American families and communities nearly 20 years before the revolution. Maryam Kashani’s Best in the West builds upon this portrait to examine the lives of four lifelong friends who studied in the United States with humor, warmth, and bittersweetness. Armon Mahdavi’s Untitled, Jackson Heights closes the program on the present day to examine public spaces in Queens through a poignant, epistolary voiceover correspondence from a mother to her child. The in-person screening at MOMI will be followed by a discussion with filmmaker Armon Mahdavi.


KHANEVADE is curated by Nick Kouhi and is co-presented by ArteEast and Museum of the Moving Image. This program is part of the legacy program Unpacking the ArteArchive, which preserves and presents over 20 years of film and video programming by ArteEast. Selections from KHANEVADE will be screened in-person at 12:30pm on July 12 followed by a discussion with filmmaker Armon Mahdavi moderated by the curator. For more information about the in-person screening visit https://movingimage.org/event/khanevade-portraits-of-iranian-americans/. The full program will be screened online on artearchive.org from July 13-23, including a recorded discussion with filmmaker Persis Karim and scholar Amy Malek.


About the curator

Nick Kouhi is a programmer and film critic who's written for Filmmaker Magazine, Reverse Shot, Screen Slate, and Documentary Magazine. His previous collaboration with ArteEast was I Am From Here, I Am From There: Writers in Exile, and he has served on the screening committees of True/False and DOC NYC.














This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Yasamin (2017)

An 11-year-old girl named Yasamin has just moved from Iran to Los Angeles amidst the Iranian Hostage Crisis; however, her navigation of the trials and tribulations of assimilation are learned through a single unibrow.


About the filmmaker

Julia is an Iranian-American writer/director whose work spans across the narrative and documentary landscape. Through film, she aims to shed light on underrepresented stories which capture life’s candid beauty. At age 19, her short film “Yasamin”, based on her mother’s story of immigration, was a Grand Jury Prize Nominee at the 2018 AFI Film Festival. Her latest short, “In the Garden of Tulips”, had its world premiere at the Aspen Shortsfest, where it won the “Youth Jury Award.” The film also took home the Oscar®-qualifying award for “Best Live Action Short Film” at the St. Louis International Film Festival and has made its online debut as a Vimeo Staff Pick. In the future, Julia hopes to tell more stories that remind us to cherish the small wonders of life that emerge even in the face of hardship.

  • Year
    2017
  • Runtime
    14 minutes
  • Language
    English, farsi
  • Country
    United States
  • Genre
    Drama
  • Subtitle Language
    English
  • Director
    Julia Elihu
  • Screenwriter
    Julia Elihu
  • Cast
    Roxana Mousavi, Mana Monshian, Firouzeh Farah, Ava Lalezarzadeh, Max McConville, Gisue Kharrati, Lisa Elihu
  • Cinematographer
    Gabriel Gaurano
  • Editor
    Gabriel Gaurano & Julia Elihu
  • Music
    Beni Anavian
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