Cinema Releases - Ava
Based on her own adolescent experiences, Sadaf Foroughi's Ava is a gripping debut about a young girl's coming-of-age in a strict, traditional society. Living with her well-to-do parents in Tehran, Ava is a bright and focused teen whose concerns - friendships, music, social status, academic performance - resemble that of nearly any teenager. When Ava's mistrustful and overprotective mother questions her relationship with a boy, going so far as to visit a gynecologist, Ava is overwhelmed by a newfound rage. Formerly a model student, Ava begins to rebel against the strictures imposed by her parents, her school, and the society at large.
Discovery Section FIPRESCI Prize at Toronto International Film Festival 2017
Iran / Canada 2017 103 mins
Amazon
iTunes/Apple TV
Google Play
Online at Curzon Home Cinema and BFI Player or Modern Films
Online for Ireland only on IFI@Home
Venues that were supported via Virtual Cinema from August to September were:
HOME Manchester, Rio Dalston, Arthouse Crouch End, Broadway Nottingham, Glasgow Film Theatre, Queens Film Theatre, Cine Lumiere, Chapter Cardiff,Ipswich Film Theatre, Showroom Sheffield, Depot Lewes, Phoenix Leicester, Watershed Bristol
Sadaf Foroughi is an Iranian-born, Montreal-based filmmaker. She began her artistic career in 2003 by creating and producing short films, documentaries and video art.
In 2005, she was selected to participate in the Berlinale Talent Campus as a writer/director.
Her short documentary Feminin, Masculin (2007) was nominated for the Best Non-European Film Award at the Grand Off-European Film Awards in Warsaw and won the Best Short Film award at the Oxford Brookes University Annual Film and Music Festival.
Foroughi graduated with an MA in Film Studies from the University of Provence and obtained a degree in Film Production from the New York Film Academy.
She cowrote, co-produced, and appeared in Kiarash Anvari's feature-length film The Pot and the Oak (2017), which had its world premiere in the Bright Future Competition Section of the International Film Festival Rotterdam.
Sadaf's debut feature film Ava had its premiere in the Toronto International Film Festival in 2017. Ava was given an honourable mention as the best Canadian debut feature film and awarded the Discovery Section FIPRESCI Prize at Toronto International Film Festival 2017.
2017 Ava
2011 The Final Scene
2007 Feminin, Masculin
2004 An Impression
Cast |
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Ava |
Mahour Jabbari |
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Mother |
Bahar Noohian |
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Father |
Vahid Aghapour |
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Melody |
Shayesteh Sajadi |
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Ms Dehkhoda |
Leili Rashidi |
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Crew |
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Director: |
Sadaf Foroughi |
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Scriptwriter: |
Sadaf Foroughi |
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Cinematographer: |
Sina Kermanizadeh |
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Sound: |
Amirhossein Ghasemi |
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Editor: |
Kiarash Anvari |
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Producer: |
Sadaf Foroughi, Kiarash Anvari |
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Production Company: |
Sweet Delight Pictures |
★★★★
‘Film of the Week’
Sadaf Foroughi turns the family drama trope on its head in this superb story of a girl in Iran at war with her mother... and turns it into something resembling a political thriller.’
'Ava is made with superb technique and real style.’
Peter Bradshaw, THE GUARDIAN
★★★★★
‘There is much to absorb in this multi-award-winning coming-of-age drama from writer-director Foroughi, as the age-old battleground of parent and teenager is given a conservative Middle Eastern spin.’
Hilary A White, IRISH INDEPENDENT
★★★★
‘Canadian-Iranian director Sadaf Foroughi offers up a gut-wrenching tale of adolescent rebellion set against the strictures of an oppressive Middle Eastern society. It rivals the work of Aaghar Farhadi in quality…’Foroughi keeps the story unpredictable, even though we are aware throughout that there is little hope for a natural rebel like Ava.’
Joseph Walsh, The i paper
★★★★
‘This impressive first feature from writer and director Sadaf Foroughi uses long takes and buffeting, overlapping dialogue to bring a fresh, vital energy to the inventively framed widescreen screens.'
There's a jagged emotional authenticity scored into the film like initials carved into a desk.’
Wendy Ide, THE OBSERVER
★★★★
‘The shots are exquisitely composed, set out with an impressionistic quality which gives the film a stunning painterly aesthetic.
Foroughi delivers a strong debut with a perfectly pitched performance from Mahour Jabbari.’
Lillian Crawford, LITTLE WHITE LIES
★★★★
‘There are lots of perceptive, knotty moments…Mahour Jabbari is excellent in the title role.’
Edward Porter, THE SUNDAY TIMES
★★★★
‘Making clever use of shallow-depth of field and intriguing framing devices to externalise Ava’s intensifying feelings of entrapment, Foroughi – yet another first timer – has made an auspicious and perceptive film about that real barriers facing the young and the steely defiance required to start pushing past them.’
Alistair Harkness, THE SCOTSMAN
‘Sadaf Foroughi’s drama testimonial to an Iranian adolescence is a cool, sharply calibrated exposé of the country’s culture of repression.’‘Ava ends with a shot that might be considered Foroughi’s personal sign-off, nodding to The 400 Blows…This overt address to the viewer is in keeping with Foroughi’s strongly stylised approach.'
SIGHT AND SOUND
★★★★
‘A visually crisp emotionally devastating, coming-of-age drama from Iran.‘First time director-writer Sadaf Foroughi refuses to swerve blood, sweat and tears, but also finds time to make us smile.’
Charlotte O’Sullivan, THE EVENING STANDARD
★★★★
‘In a society so rigid, Sadaf Foroughi seethes for those who can’t get their fairytale Matilda ending…in this oppressive morality tale. ‘Jabbari’s performance is unforgettable…’‘This is not a victorious story of liberation, like Al-Mansour’s Wadjda or Ergüven’s Mustang—it instead harkens to the unresolved tension of Asghar Farhadi.’
Fatima Sheriff ONE ROOM WITH A VIEW
★★★★
‘From a compelling new filmmaker, Sadaf Foroughi.‘It’s an unforgiving, unforgettable film about loss of freedom from a very interesting new filmmaker.’
Alexa Dalby,DOG AND WOLF
‘Foroughi’s impressive feature debut… with inspiring subtlety and a self-assured, unique visual style.’
‘Although the film looks upon Ava with infinite compassion, she is never infantilized: lead actress Mahour Jabbari plays her character with a force and conviction that makes this young, first-time actress one of the revelations of the festival.’Read Elena Lazic’s interview with director Sadaf Foroughi where she talks about visual storytelling, making a feminist film, and avoiding cliche. SEVENTH ROW
'Ava features a breakout performance by Mahour Jabbari as the titular character who starts off as a happy-go-lucky teen who grows more sullen and defiant as the film progresses. Leili Rashidi gives another standout performance as the head mistress of Ava’s school.’
Lauren, BLACKGIRLNERDS
Read Lauren's interview with Sadaf Foroughi discussing what it took to make the leap from short films to her first feature Ava and the difficulties of being a female director in BLACKGIRLNERDS
‘An assured debut which pits traditional and obedience against a natural tendency to rebel.’
‘It’s easy to see why Ava won the FIPRESCI Prize at Toronto International Film Festival in the Discovery section. Jabbari impresses in her first acting role whilst there’s clever use of location to represent the parameters she has to live in.’
‘Ava is a powerful and precise coming-of-age drama.’
Rob Aldam, BACKSTREET MAFIA
'Tonally acrid and visually inventive (the wonderful cinematography is by Sina Kermanizadeh), "Ava" looks repression in the eye and doesn't flinch.
Lurching relentlessly from one conflict to another, the movie distills its emotions - and maintains its momentum - in conversations of remarkably controlled intensity.'
Jeannette Catsoulis, THE NEW YORK TIMES
'Canada-Iran-Qatar co-production Ava offers unforgettable expose of life under a theocracy.'
Kate Taylor, THE GLOBE AND MAIL
'How much of the pain of Sadaf Foroughi's first feature - winner of one of my Fipresci jury's two prizes at the Toronto International Film Festival, a film from Iran - is the pain of being a teenager, and how much is it being a teenager at a particular place and time? How much is personal and how much is institutional, familial, cultural, social, political, architectural?
These are the questions raised by Foroughi's exquisite, unorthodox framings and reframings of her characters, each one posing a separate inquiry. [9-20-17]'
Jonathan Rosenbaum, Questions in and about AVA
Beautifully observed, Sadaf Foroughi's feature debut but but explores the way that, even in societies explicitly controlled by men, it's often women who enforce social rules and seek to control one another's behaviour.
'With complex, nuanced performances that tell us a lot about each individual character's history, this film plays out like the Stanford experiment, investigating the impact of closed, hierarchical structures on human behaviour, yet without losing sight of the humanity of those involved.'
Jennie Kermode, EYE FOR FILM
'...the filmmaker has crafted a compelling, thoughtful portrait of family crisis.'
Rachel Willis, UK Film Review
If '400 Blows' were female and Iranian, it would be the sharply observed 'Ava'.
Ava is a layered, complex character, and one that anyone who was ever a teenager can identify with.
Mick LaSalle, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
'Imagine if "A Separation" took place inside an all-girls high school in Tehran, and don't forget to add in a generous dash of hormones and vicious gossip. Foroughi finds the balance in an overwrought situation.
'It's gut-punch cinema, uneasy and unpredictable, though Foroughi keeps it clicking right along into the rare open ending that feels earned.'
Kate Erbland, INDIWIRE
'Ava is an assured, skillful portrayal of torturous female adolescence.'
Lena Wilson, THE PLAYLIST
'At its most gripping, Ava communicates...familiar adolescent agonies through formal detail that makes them smoulder anew.'
Danny King, VILLAGE VOICE
'Foroughi's assured debut remains a welcomed and insightful reminder that the patriarchy Ava struggles against is still alive and kicking.'
Leonardo Goi, THE FILM STAGE
'An Iranian teenager rebels against her claustrophobic society in Sadaf Foroughi's insightful feature debut.'
Deborah Young, THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
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Q&A with Sadaf Foroughi at the Lincoln Center on YouTube