Fifi Howls from Happiness

October. 02,2013      
Rating:
7.7
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Bahman Mohassess was a celebrated artist at the time of the Shah. Trained in Italy, he created sculptures and paintings in his homeland. But audiences often took offence at the pronounced phalli on his mostly naked bronze figures and his work was regularly censored. All traces of him were lost after the revolution. It was said he destroyed his remaining paintings and disappeared.

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Reviews

DipitySkillful
2013/10/02

an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.

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Humaira Grant
2013/10/03

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Brendon Jones
2013/10/04

It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.

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Joanna Mccarty
2013/10/05

Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.

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Amir Rayat Nazari
2013/10/06

If you wish discover one of the most important faces of Modern Iran fine arts, this is the documentary that will learn you about Bahman Mohassess: the great sculptor/painter who lived and worked most of his life in Roma rather than in his motherland. Mitra Farahani succeeded to turn her documentary to an attractive fiction, where chapter after chapter the spectator will familiarize with the personage. The director narrates briefly the essential points from personal life and professional career of the artist. She had not used expensive equipment and cameras, but very discreetly she entered in the privacy of the artist and broke the solitude of the old man in a pleasant way. Thanks to this confidence between the cineaste and her subject, Mohassess plays himself very naturally just like an actor; as a result the last days of his life become a touching tale in front of Farahani's camera. The resemblance with the short story of Balzac "The unknown masterpiece" is to a certain extent comparable, as Mohassess destroyed several of his works in his life and like the Master Frenhofer dies before finishing his last chef d'oeuvre. He left the show at the right moment, so his death becomes dramatically his ultimate masterwork.Hypothetically with a bit of chance and obviously by better management of his relationships with the international artistic Medias/ art galleries/ collectors/etc. Mohassess could have become as famous as his fellows such as Giacometti, but he preferred to remain loyal to his own style: individualist but united with human cause, philosophically pessimistic but joyful and droll in daily life, a tremendously creative artist but in an auto-destruction approach like a rebel intellectual. Undoubtedly the sad and regrettable fact is to observe how both Iranian Diaspora and domestic society were terribly indifferent during decades towards such a genius!

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Guido Zichichi
2013/10/07

Shooting this long interview about Mohasses, the director Mitra Farahani makes Mohassess believe that she is doing a documentary about his life. Mohassess, a smart and funny old painter that has been famous in Iran, accepts flattered and gives clear instructions to Farahani about how he would like it to begin, how he would like the last scene to be, what poems he would like would be read during the movie.Taking advantage of the death of Mohassess, the director makes fun of Mohassess, and puts on the screen many interviews but also embarrassing moments of the artist's life: from his frequent pauses for his need to pee (where she makes us listen to the sound of the flush of the toilet), to his burps while he is not being interviewed. The director also keeps her camera switched on while he is dying, so that we can hear his last coughs while he is spitting blood: maybe the most intimate moment in everyone life.What is clear from this long documentary, is that Mohassess was a narcissistic and proud old man, that would have never accepted to be part of a documentary like this. It is not about his life, but just about the last days on earth of a man.

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kosmasp
2013/10/08

I had no idea who that was. Since I make it a habit not reading about the movies I'm about to watch, the less I know the happier I am (mostly, depending on how the movies turn out to be). So apart from the fact, that this was a documentary, I had no idea what I was letting myself into. And I got to know an artist, I had never heard about. Contrary to the filmmaker that is. And the enthusiasm springs over to the artist/painter himself.The guy is funny and although we get to see him towards the end of his journey, he does remember his good times and lets the viewer participate on what he went through. There will be a few others who will meet the artist (fans) and the interaction overall is really priceless. Even though not easy at all times (which artist is), it's funny and tragic at the same time.

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