Persepolis (2007) Poster

(2007)

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8/10
Animation in black-and-white, autobiographical, growing up in Iran during the reign of the Shah and later, the Islamists
collingonze3 July 2007
The black-and-white animation, highly stylized and two dimensions which doesn't attempt to render the usual cartoon 3-D, summarizes in quick, intelligent flashes, often impressionistic, growing up in Teheran and Vienna from a highly personal point of view. The narrative is as original as the art. The narrator, Marjane Satrapi, only daughter of an educated Teheran couple, first sketches in briefly how the Shah first came to power,only to lose it and have it replaced by the fanatical religious regime of today. Educated in a French school, she and her family are rapidly alienated from the so-called revolution; she is sent to Vienna to continue her education, falls in with a group of punks and eventually returns both depressed and disillusioned to Teheran where, with other university students, she must submit to the rule of extreme Islamists.

The story covers a great deal of ground from the point of view of a young pro-Western culture radical, and is told with humor and intelligence. She laughs at herself as much as at the semi-lunatic Guards of the Revolution.

Satrapi's hold on reality is much strengthened under the influence of her highly honest grandmother who teaches her not co compromise, not to betray and not to give in.

This is no fairy tale with flying horses and beautiful princesses, but a serious, unsentimental and sometimes brutally honest film covering, among other events, the story of the millions of Iranians and Iraqis who died in a now forgotten seven year war around the Persian Gulf.
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8/10
A very personal yet universal account of the Iranian revolution
inglis-519 August 2007
I came out of this movie feeling as if I knew Marjane Satrapi. The way in which the story is told is fantastic - it really is as if you're reading her journal. As she grows up from being a young girl to an adult, at each age the story is told with a corresponding maturity, and highlighting things which seem like very personal memories. As a young girl, the stories she is told are very black and white, and as she gets older the complexity increases, which is exactly what you would expect. Although there is lots of political activity, she makes fun of herself and highlights her own shortcomings as much as she highlights the repressive elements in her homeland. By telling of her own experiences it really is extremely easy to see how so much of it is common to a whole generation of Iranians. Her love of her family and her country came across very strongly, and you really felt as if she had laid herself bare. A moving and entertaining movie as much as it is educational about post-1979 Iran.
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9/10
the book is a fuller experience
monomagazine19 January 2008
I rated this film a 9 more as a visual complement to the comic book (of two volumes, now bound as one), which I believe to be a masterpiece. If you left the film less than emotionally attached to the characters, PLEASE give the book a chance, because, as is often the case, episodes and histories of a lot of the characters, including Marjane, are left out to adapt the story to a film medium. Having said that, there are great sequences, expressionistic animation, and the wiseass grandma is left fully intact from the books! I can understand why some people weren't emotionally compelled by it though, since the movie doesn't take the time to fill the audience in on all the quirkiness and endearing qualities of the characters as Satrapi originally conceived them.
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Not your average animated feature...
nonsequitur2472 December 2007
...in fact, there is nothing average about this film. Traditionally animated in black and white flashbacks, it tells the story of a French-speaking woman's childhood and young adulthood in Tehran, Iran, and in Vienna during the 1980s and '90s.

Marjane Satrapi grew up in a family of revolutionaries against the Shah's regime and the Islamic government that subsequently took hold, and the film literally illustrates her feelings and thought processes as a little girl, following her as the government control in Iran got more and more strict. When her parents insist she leave the country, we also see her struggling to deal with adolescence and missing her beloved family; when she returns, she is also coping with the increasing repression of her freedoms as a woman. Most of all, you see her own personal conflict as she tries to stay true to herself.

This movie beautifully balances both the historic and personal issues and pulls the threads together into a compelling narrative, made a bit quirky by the style of presentation, resulting in work that is altogether touching. Along with intelligence and humor, a deep and strong sense of truth infuses every part of this film, making it even stronger. One of my only qualms was the feeling that it ended somewhat abruptly without much of a conclusion.

Overall, though, it was fantastic - definitely worth watching.
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9/10
A wonderful told story with a unique style
Rick_Bman26 January 2008
Persepolis tells the amazing story of a young girl growing up in Iran around the time of the Islamic Revolution. Marjane Satrapi does a wonderful job of bringing her story to life and drawing the viewer into her what it was to grow up during a time of political revolution. Using a unique style of animation, that closely follows the style of the graphic novel, the audience is pulled into a world that is much different than the world they are used to.

Marjane's story is often times humorous and often times heart breaking without resorting to heavy handed sentimentalism that is often seen in Hollywood movies. There were times that I laughed out loud during the movie, particularly the "Eye of the Tiger" sequence which had me in stitches. Other times during the film I had to wipe a tear from my eye. I won't spoil any of those moments for anyone, but there were parts of the film that left me crushed.

The characters in the story were all very interesting and all seemed very real. I loved watching Marjane grow from a child to an adult and seeing how she dealt with struggles as extreme as a revolution and as simple as the end of a relationship. Most of the supporting characters were interesting as well and extremely well thought out. The most memorable of the side characters though, would have to be Marjane's grandmother. She almost acted as Marjane's moral compass throughout the film and in most cases she did it with a great cynicism and humor that only someone who has lived through so much could have.

As an American I will probably never know what it is like to live in a state of such political oppression as the one depicted in the film. It is an extremely hard thing to even imagine what people go through during such political struggles. However, one of the things that makes this movie unique is that a lot of it is told from the point of view of a child that does not really understand the politics of what is going on around her. This really helped draw me into the movie. Since I do not understand what it is like to be in the situation, having the story told from the point of view of someone that doesn't really grasp the enormity of the events unfolding around her really helped to bring me into the story. It was very helpful in trying to comprehend the scale of what was happening in the movie, not that I claim to totally comprehend what this young girl must have gone through.

The animation style of the film is definitely interesting and unique. It is a lot different than anything I have seen before and I really enjoyed the style that was used. The more simplistic animation that was used definitely worked well with the story being told from the point of view of a child. The child in the story could not totally grasp all the details of what was going on during the revolution and having a less detailed style of animation definitely helped emphasize this. Also, having a style of animation that was so different than what audience are used to also helped emphasize that we were viewing a world that was, in many ways, much different than our own.

Overall I really enjoyed the film and it is one that I may eventually want to see again. I really would like to read the graphic novels that it was based on and probably even a few of the other graphic novels written by Marjane Satrapi. I think she is a wonderful talent and I hope she continues to make such interesting films, perhaps bringing some of her other graphic novels to the big screen.
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10/10
A whole new kind of animation
MaxBorg8931 December 2007
Persepolis is one of the most thoughtful, poignant and original films I have ever seen. Hang on, "poignant" and "thoughful", an animated movie (and based on a comic-book, on top of that)? Exactly, because coincidentally Persepolis also happens to be the first really adult "cartoon" I've had the pleasure to watch (Waking Life and A Scanner Darkly don't count, as they were filmed with real actors first, and subsequently modified in post-production). For all their good intentions, the likes of Dreamworks and Pixar always have an eye for what the little ones want to see, while The Simpsons, despite the occasional "mature" storyline (basically Homer and Marge's sex life), contains nothing a 12-year old isn't supposed to see. As for Family Guy and South Park, they might be aimed at grown-ups with their merciless satire and, in the case of the latter series, explicit language, but are made with an almost puerile sense of joy which prompts younger kids to watch them in secret. Persepolis, on the other hand, deals with adult themes in a serious, unpretentious way. So yes, it is an animated film. Yes, it is based on a comic-book. And yes, there is the occasional neat movie reference (Rocky III being the most memorable one). That doesn't mean it's a kids' movie, though; it just means the picture was made with a particular style because it was the most effective way to tell this specific story.

And what is so special about the story? Well, it is an account of what is going on in contemporary Iran, a topic that is more relevant today than it's ever been before. And the extra layer of poignancy derives from the fact that co-director Marjane Satrapi experienced every single event in the film. After moving to France to avoid the increasingly oppressive political situation that had developed in Teheran (which the ancient Greeks called Persepolis, hence the movie's title), she published her autobiography in the form of a graphic novel, which immediately became a cult phenomenon. With the help of artist Vincent Paronnaud, the stylized drawings have become a motion picture which has already conquered critics and won several awards (the Jury Prize in Cannes being one of them).

The film's strict adherence to the book's style makes for simple but powerful viewing: the simple pictures ensure the story doesn't need to be filtered, but can be understood right away, while the use of black and white provide the images with a strength that would otherwise be missing. A good example is a scene depicting a demonstration against the despotic regime in Iran and the subsequent shooting of one of the protesters, whose body is left lying on the ground: as his blood starts to flow, the corpse almost merges with the environment, giving the shot (pun not intended) an emotional relevance it wouldn't have, had the whole thing been in color. The choice of animation proves to be particularly effective in a most unusual choice for this kind of film, namely fantasy sequences: there is a hilarious moment, for instance, when Marjane, during a stay in Vienna, looks back on her disappointment in love and sees her ex-boyfriend as a depraved freak; live-action would have ruined that scene, undoubtedly. As it is, however, it comes off not as a bizarre formal experiment, but a fundamental tool for understanding the heroine's psychology.

That said, it should also be noted that Persepolis isn't just a bold take on the difficulties in the Middle East. As seen in Clint Eastwoood's Iwo Jima double bill, the line between "heroes" and "villains" is very thin, and the film never misses the opportunity to show how bad our own society can be: Marjane ends up hating Europe more than her home-country, and at the beginning a flashback shows the British government's role in manipulating Iranian politics for money's sake. Incidentally, the latter scene is depicted as a puppet show, providing a new, fresh angle: what sets truth apart from fiction?

Persepolis works because it handles an uncomfortable subject with grace, using a simple but constantly effective storytelling technique and never once pandering to audience expectations with the usual 'toon gimmicks (even the casting proves that: except for Catherine Deneuve, who plays the low-key role of Marjane's mother, there are no famous voices in the feature). It sticks to traditions and stretches the medium at the same time, showing that animation is no longer a "children's genre" and therefore delivering a new way to look at film-making and its possibilities. For this reason, and several more, it is one of the best pictures of 2007.
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8/10
Festival film, celebrated in France, now an Oscar contender?
Chris Knipp11 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Iranian expatriate Marjane Satrapi's 'Persepolis' graphic novel series (2000-2003) recounts her life to age 24, when she left Iran with her family's blessing for the last time and went to live in France (1994). Collaborating with her Paris studio-mate, cartoonist and video artist Vincent Paronnaud and a stellar French cast, Sagtrapi has successfully transferred her drawings and story to a 95-minute black-and-white animated film. Chiara Mastroianni is the voice for the adolescent and young adult Marjane; Chiara's real-life mother Catherine Deneuve does Marjane's mother and veteran French star Danielle Darrieux is the voice of Marjane's feisty, outspoken, and totally irreverent grandmother. (An English-language version featuring Sean Penn, Iggy Pop, and Gena Rowlands apparently will be released later.) Word on the street is that this more handmade French animated film, now in selected US theaters, may give Pixar's slick 'Ratatouille' a run for the Best Animation Oscar this year.

Satrapi, who told this story first in autobiographical comic strips that became best-selling books, grew up in a progressive ruling-class Tehran family. An uncle with whom she was close had been to Leningrad to study Marxism-Leninism. As a little girl she picked up the radicalism, and had some of her grandmother's genes for outspokenness. Shifting allegiances and roles quickly, she soon gave up supporting the Shah and walked around the house calling for revolution. She tried on ideas constantly, posing as a prophet, then a dictator. God and Karl Marx, whom she imagines appearing to her in her bedroom, vie with each other for her affections. Her communist uncle is hopeful that the revolution will grow democratic; but while he is imprisoned and tortured by CIA-trained jailers under the Shah, he is executed under the mullahs—whom, strangely, the narrator says little about. (Khomeini is not depicted.) All the girls must take the veil. But Marji, already an avid collector of bootleg heavy metal and punk tapes, remains an obstreperous girl who in class outspokenly challenges the pious lies of her chador-wearing teachers.

Iran's war with Iraq causes terrible disruption: the house next door is destroyed. For her safety in this desperate moment for the country (1983), Marji's parents send her to Vienna, where she attends a French school, as she has all her life. Though she eventually becomes part of a group of misfit students, Vienna is a hard and lonely time for the girl. She grows up physically (which happens in seconds in the animation—the film's most eye-catching sequence) and enters love problems: first with a boy who turns out to be gay; then one who sleeps with another girl—a betrayal that makes her so despondent she becomes homeless and ill and almost dies. She returns to an Iran where the upper class is living a double life of secret alcohol parties and music. Attending university in Tehran she meets a man named Reza and marries him--but the union is a mistake, which her grandmother cheerfully dismisses. "The first marriage is just practice," she says. A bored, doodling psychiatrist listens to her troubles, tells her she's depressed, and gives her some pills--which seem to make her more depressed.

Finally the time comes when Marjane is in effect ordered by her family to leave the country for her own good. She goes to France, where she has remained ever since. That's the end of the book and the film.

Art Spiegelman's Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel 'Maus' was an avowed inspiration for Satrapi's work, as well as a French comics artist named David B., whose style she imitated at first. The collaboration with Paronnaud came about after they shared a studio.

The animated 'Persepolis' received rave reviews in France and shared the Cannes festival Jury Prize with Carlos Reygadas' 'Silent Light.' It premiered in the US at the New York Film Festival and opened in some US theaters on Christmas Day.

The US's newly hostile stand against Iran may spur wider Stateside interest in this film, which skillfully combines a young woman's coming of age story with contemporary political history. This remains, however, basically a child's and young adult's version of events, a kind of post-1970 'Iranian History for Dummies.' The viewpoint has obvious limitations as a depiction of the larger events that are so much a part of the story Satrapi tells. The film moreover adds little that wasn't in the book other than a little more gray cross-hatching and in fact omits some day-to-day detail that make the original version specific. The film's look too remains as bare-bones, as virtually style-neutral as the book's. This is not to say 'Persepolis' hasn't complete technical integrity, clarity of storytelling, and much charm; nonetheless viewers in search of a phantasmogoric visual banquet or a thoroughgoing picture of modern Iranian history may be left hungry for more.
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10/10
One of the best films of 2007
abernant_8527 December 2007
This is a marvelous film. The voice actors in French are superb; I'm not sure whether it will translate in an English dub. The animation is charming; you forget that it's mostly black and white, and remember only how beautiful it is. It is both bleak and hilarious, chilling and human. The "Eye Of The Tiger" scene is awesome for being so amateurishly sung in heavily accented English and only just in key. I learned a great deal about modern Iranian history, and relived a great deal of childhood and adolescence (albeit not in a sophomoric way).

I saw it at a free screening with about 6 other people before it was released, but I will be paying to see it again and dragging as many people as I can to see it with me. If you're reading this, I'd drag you to see it, too. It's a GREAT film, one that deserves all the awards it can garner, and not just as an animated film, but as a brilliant movie that just happens to be animated.
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7/10
A life in cartoons.
moimoichan613 August 2007
It's quite unusual for a writer to adapt its own book to the screen, especially when it's a comic-book (well, Frank Miller's done it, but that's another story), and especially when it's an autobiographical comic book. That's the originality of this movie, which is the adaptation of a autobiographical graphic novel by its very author. "Persepolis" deals with the life, and especially the youth of Marjane Satrapi, in Iran, during the reign of the Shah and the Islamic revolution. But if the memories could be easily told alone in front of a blank paper, isn't it harder to be true and sincere when you are surrounded by a all animation crew ?

That's the great achievement of the movie : to be true to the comics and therefor, to the life of Marjane. The best parts of it are all about her personal relations, with her grandmother or her uncle. You really have the feeling that she relates all this events to praise their memories and who they were. On the other side, the political scenes and historical point of view that supposedly are the goal of the movie seem to me a little less good than the family or personal souvenirs. It may be true but it seems a little bit simple and even cliché sometimes (see for instance the history of the Shah for all audiences). The personal view on the repercussion of the Islamic repression is way better than this kind of big exposes. The death of a young man trying to escape the police after a party or the attitude of a man insulting her mother in a parking tells us more about the regime in Iran than the speech the movie sometimes (but not so often) gives us.

So, paradoxically, the more personal the movie gets, the truer it is. The all rapport the difficulties to left your country and to adapt to another world seems for instance very honest and touching. The childhood period, told in a comic strip style is both funny and melancholic. In the end, this movie is far from being a movie about Iran, but only tells an individual life, crying for freedom in a country were a woman can't reach it, but transfigured by personal memories and a strong animated point of view, that uses all the techniques and styles a comic-book adaptation could offer.
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8/10
Intellectual and funny autobiographical animation. One of a kind
VoiceOfEurope1 March 2008
Marjane Satrapi's venture to present the chronicle of the Iranian Islamic revolution filtered through the eyes of a lively and cheeky, French-educated young girl is bold and ambitious. To do so by the help of strong-silhouetted, axe-carved, triangle-nosed cartoon figures is even more peculiar. Her powerful heroine – Marjane, named by no coincidence after the creator – however, spectacularly succeeds in replacing and emulating any possible real flesh characters. She is intellectual, witty, utterly impudent and very funny; the essential Euro-kid of the wild and untamed 1970s and early 1980s.

This brilliant movie serves as a study proving that animation is more powerful and potent than ever before no matter how unsophisticated and basic the visual elements are. And although the technique used in Persepolis has long been present it can be said that perfection has just been achieved.

Satrapi's work is so very French: wantonly intellectual, acrimoniously witty, utterly sarcastic and outrageously funny. However, even this masterpiece could not escape common places and is not without disturbing occurrences of generalization of characters and situations. Still, you will have a wide and genuine smile on your face coming out of the theater. Persepolis is per se unique and compelling with the ability to make you smile at the right moments - when tension has built up too much.
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6/10
Good but I just don't understand why people raved about this
dbborroughs27 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The life of a young woman growing up before and after the revolution in Iran during the the late 1970's and early 1980's.

Marjane Satrapi's animated version of her graphic novel left me scratching my head. Not because there is anything wrong with it, rather because the amount of praised heaped upon it I was certain the film was going to be a mind blowing experience. Don't get me wrong, its good, but I'm left to ponder why it achieved the acclaim it did. Perhaps its being a non-Japanese piece of "adult" animation had something to do with it.

I do like it, as I like the graphic novel, which it translates beautifully to the motion picture screen, but I don't consider it one of the best.
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8/10
The Contemporary History of Iran
claudio_carvalho4 April 2010
In 1978, in Iran, the smart girl Marjane Satrapi lives the troubled period of the history of her country with the Islamic Revolution with her ideologist parents and grandmother. When she is a teenager, her parents send her to Vienna due to the war with Iraq. Marjane befriends a group of outcast students, finds love and deception and returns to her country to the arms of her family. However, the life with the fundamentalist in the government is repressive and she leaves her country again to live in France.

"Persepolis" is an interesting animation where the contemporary history of Iran is disclosed through the eyes of the lead character. This feature gives a great lesson of history highlighting the most important moments of the life of Iranian in their country. This dramatic animation has many levels but is highly recommended for adults and offers excellent dialogs and messages. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "Persépolis"
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7/10
Heart wrenching tale succeeds through black and white surreal animation
MissLovelyRita24 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
*Contains semi-spoilers: Summarizes part of the plot*

Based on Marjane Satrapi's graphic novel of the same name, "Persepolis" is an animated autobiographical film that tells the story of a young Marjane growing up during the turmoil of the Iranian Revolutionary War in the early '80's and '90s. The animation is mostly in black and white, and uses abstract drawings and surreal imagery throughout. The film is in French with English subtitles.

The story begins with a young nine-year old Marjane. She is precocious and outspoken yet does not realize the reality of the Iran/Iraq conflict taking place outside her bedroom window. The Iran we see is the Iran viewed through naïve eyes – we witness Marjane's love for fashion and punk music, we see she and her friends teasing boys on the playground, and we view her playing in the snow in the winter. These images are beautiful and filled with sentimentality. Then, her world changes when her beloved uncle is executed and Iraqi bombs destroy her neighborhood. As the conflict in Iran begins to show its gravity, she becomes more aware of the importance of pride for her homeland. As she gets older, her parents worry about her outspokenness, as she protests the war in school and in other public places. During this time, any person caught denying the Iranian government, and any woman not wearing her veil, could be executed. When she is fourteen, her parents decide to protect her by sending her to a French school in Austria where she can receive a proper education free of oppression. She must endure the typical ordeals of a teenager, but must do so alone in a strange land. After a few years, she becomes too homesick and returns to Iran, where her friends and family have noticed an obvious change in her.

Although heart wrenching and sad, "Persepolis" succeeds because the audience can detach themselves to a certain extent knowing they are watching a cartoon, even if it's based on Satrapi's true story; the graphics are abstract enough that the audience can relate to them and still be able to get through her painful tale of war, death, destruction, and heartbreak. Running at just 95 minutes, each scene leaves a whirlwind of emotions and then ends without really clearing up any conflicts. We know Satrapi prevails because we know she has created this film, but we do not know how she got to where she is today; we have to just trust her strong-willed, empowering character present through every stage of her life in the film and believe that she can overcome any barrier in her way.

Although the narrator in the film tells the story through a series of flashbacks, it's easy to follow. What was more difficult, however, was understanding exactly what was happening in Iran as the film progressed. I suggest "googling" the Iranian Revolutionary War before seeing this film, because it was a complicated time that lasted nearly seven years and is more relevant today than it has ever been before.

"Persepolis" is moving, thoughtful, and painful throughout. I caught myself tearing up during the majority of the movie. Up for an Oscar for best-animated film, it might just give Disney's "Ratatouille" a run for its money.
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5/10
Animation: Exquisite, a Ten. Character, Plot and Ideas: Zilch.
Danusha_Goska28 September 2008
When "Persepolis" first made a big splash in the publishing world, I wondered why. So many good books go unpublished and unread…why so much buzz from a comic book about a girl living in Islamic Revolution Iran? Now that I've seen "Persepolis," I know the answer. Marjane, the lead character, occupies a parallel socioeconomic slot to literary agents, editors, journalists and opinion makers. She's a privileged, sheltered girl who invests in nothing and smokes, drinks, and parties her way through life while others are out making sacrifices for what they believe. From her perch of assumed superiority, Marjane looks down on everyone except her doting parents and grandmother, lights another cigarette, pours another drink, and sneers. In Marjane's view, Catholic nuns who shelter wayward youth are equally as evil as Iranian Revolutionary guards who torture dissidents to death. Et voila. Cultural Relativism, the worldview that all those who do nothing for anyone claim as their religion.

"Persepolis"'s animation is gorgeous, and worth seeing the movie for. It was inspired by German Expressionism. The animation is black and white and I'd sit through this tedious, annoying movie again just to view it. The DVD features fascinating extra features on the creation of animation.

Other than the animation, there really isn't anything to see here. Marjane is the absolute center of everything. She's the center of the universe, really. Marjane Satrapy is a spoiled, sheltered girl, the descendant of Iranian royalty. "Satrap" is Persian for "governor" and English for "a self-important official." Marjane is a passive witness to life under the late, deposed Shah, and then to the Iranian Revolution, and then to teen decadence in Europe. Along the way, she drinks, she smokes, and she sleeps with all the wrong men. Other people, those not in her family, are ridiculous, ugly, and lead pointless lives. In Marjane's view. But Marjane's view is all you get. When she meets a new guy, he is drawn as very attractive. As Marjane inevitably, and in a way meant to be tragic, discovers that her latest lover is no good, he is drawn as physically unattractive. Marjane is surrounded by people who risk all for what they believe, from her communist uncle to the Revolutionary Guard. Marjane believes in nothing, and risks nothing. She just looks on and sniffs.

A successful narrative requires a sympathetic main character and a coherent narrative. "Persepolis" has neither. Marjane's problem is not that she's such a passive, contemptuous person, but that she exercises no self awareness or critical capacity. She never takes a good hard look at herself or her country's circumstances. It is enough for her to depict others as ridiculously and blameworthy. The storyline is not coherent. The Shah, the Ayatollahs, a woman's dog in Vienna who misbehaves – all are passing shadows in Marjane's jaded vision. Nothing hangs together.

Americans, British people, and Catholic nuns are responsible for all the problems in the world. Never, not once, does "Persepolis" so much as hint at the theory that maybe, just maybe, the once great Persian Empire was brought down by Islam, imported by force by less advanced Arabs, that mandates gender apartheid and jihad, both of which have devastated Iran under the ayatollahs. There are certainly Persians in exile who will tell you just that. Any work about modern Iran that never once interrogates what Islam is doing to that nation so rich in resources and currently so poor in fact is dropping the intellectual ball.

One weird aspect of the film is its racism. None of the Iranian characters, including Marjane, look especially Iranian. Who does? The Revolutionary Guards. They are drawn with the prominent noses and heavy black hair common in the Middle East and Iran. Sympathetic characters have petite noses and less hair. Good grief.
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9/10
very good adaption !
MattDevivre20 December 2007
Adapting "Persepolis" in my opinion was a very important project. Especially (but not only) during times of fear and extreme distrust regarding other ethnicities it's necessary to communicate better understanding for these cultures. Films are capable reach millions of people all around the world. Therefore this medium is a very effective way to do this (unfortunately it can also get misused in the opposite direction).

Seen from this cultural perspective "Persepolis" is an entertaining feature which also meets a certain social responsibility. To me it is the right picture at the right time. In a individually visualized way this animation picture shows Marjane Satrapis personal biography and gives you an idea about the historical background of the Iran and the way of living in this part of the world. Besides several tragic moments "Persepolis" never loses it's humour.

In a short: "Persepolis" is a very true and affectionate adaption of the original comic also drawn by Satrapi who directed the film. An important issue and not only for this reason I truly recommend it !
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9/10
A very different kind of animated movie
FilmFreak9410 July 2011
Persepolis tells the story of a young girl growing up during the revolution of Iran. She experiences many hardships, friends and family all dying around her and a new dictatorship even worse then the one they originally faced. Her parents decide to send her abroad to Vienna where she experiences more hardships. Having to deal with accepting her heritage, moving around from place to place, and dealing with heartbreak from unsuccessful relationships. She eventually returns to Iran where things have calmed down, but are still not any better then before. She deals with depression, more relationship problems and the pressures of the new regime. All the while she keeps her adventurous personality, and her happy-go-lucky attitude. Persepolis is not your typical animated film. It's a drama about life. The hardships the main character goes through are some that people go through every day. And while you might not relate to the living in a dictatorship part, you can relate to her problems and with her relationships to her friends and family. This film is a perfect example of how animation can be just as moving as live-action. This is a great movie. I highly recommend it to anyone and everyone.
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PERSEPOLIS - Animated film of the Year?
gortx4 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I've been curious about the PERSEPOLIS ever since it won a jury prize in Cannes this spring. The buzz was strong, and it's won (or been nominated for) numerous prizes since then. It's an Animated film, which rarely get taken seriously in non-Animated categories. It's even France's official entry for the Academy Awards (THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY was disqualified because it wasn't 'French' enough for the Oscars). Could it be that good?

Yes.

I love RATATOUILLE, but PERSEPOLIS is a tremendously affecting film. It tells the autobiographical story of Marjane Satrapi an Iranian woman who left her native Iran for France. First done as a Graphic Novel, Satrapi co-directed this simply rendered animation film in collaboration with Vincent Parranoud. Most of it is in Black & White. It may take some getting used to for folks weened on CGI (or big budget 'traditional' animation), but it serves the story impeccably.

There have been other graphic novels that have used Animation (in addition to numerous live action adaptations such as Cronenberg's HISTORY OF VIOLENCE), but PERSEPOLIS finds a way to present its tale on film in a way I've never seen before. There are lots of short scenes, it takes place over a number of years, and covers a lot of physical and emotional territory. All of these would have been foreboding for a live action film, but the simple (but beautiful) animation isn't just a compromise - it's a revelation. A ten second still drawing here conveys what a full 2 or 3 minute live action scene might struggle to achieve.

The story covers the era from the fall of the Shah of Iran to (roughly) the mid-90's. The hoped for freedom of the post-Shah regime ends up in an even more repressive Muslim government. This sounds grim, and much of it is. Hopefully, PERSEPOLIS will also educate folks that Iran has a long history of being one of the more educated and culturally aware nations in the Middle East. Pop culture references to Arnuld, Michael Jackson, Abba and, most amusingly, Godzilla (Toho even gets a thank you in the credits!) will resonate with Western audiences, but they serve a purpose in the story. Hopefully, that message will out in the country as well.
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10/10
A grim, but captivating account of the human spirit
Seamus282910 February 2008
Persepolis is a lovingly,hand drawn animated feature film from France, that tells the story of a young girl growing up in Iran,the daughter of left wing revolutionary parents,during the Islamic revolution. It spans something like 13 years in her life, from childhood,adolescence to early adulthood. It was taken from a graphic novel,published in France. Most of the prints in circulation are the French language version, but there is an English dubbed version (I thankfully saw the original French version,with English subtitles). What I really admired was the carefully nuanced use of colour (most of the flashback sequences are in black & white). In an era that is now overblown with 3D computer generated animation, it's refreshing to see somebody kicking it old school style (hand drawn). This is a film that is worth seeking out.
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10/10
As an Iranian girl growing up, I RELATE TO IT
odestosleep8 January 2019
For those who wonder if the situation is/was that bad through the reveloution and decades after that, it's compelety true. As a teenage girl growing up in Iran I can relate to it and I felt for her because that's exactly what me and other girls at my age or going through right now.

10/10
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6/10
A personal history: engaging but not compelling
Stephen_W11 January 2008
I saw "Persepolis" after hearing a lot of buzz, along with a radio interview with the writer/director, Ms. Satrapi, so I had a good idea what to expect going in. And, bottom line, the film did not disappoint -- but it didn't "wow" me either.

As a personal history, a sort of animated diary, it did the only thing it could do: show us a deeply personal account of events that have shaped our world. So, in that capacity, I found it educational, and generally engaging. After all, we all probably know the basic facts of these events. But how many of us have had such a subjective, impressionistic account, one which, by definition, will be skewed to the storyteller's point-of-view, but provides a valuable perspective nonetheless? And while I agree with some of the other comments on this board (the film employs predictable cliché, jokes that fall flat, etc.), I can forgive those as minor faults in an otherwise noble, and at times quite entertaining, effort.

As a film, however, "Persepolis" falls short. One of the basic requirements of storytelling, at least in most cinematic genres, is that the filmmaker engage the audience emotionally, especially if he or she is trying to put across a moral or specific political message. And this is where Persepolis never really grabbed me. While anyone can easily empathize with the exploits of a darling, precocious little girl in such extraordinary circumstances, the "episodic" way her story is told prevented me from truly identifying with the Marjane character. We want to feel that the protagonist's goals are our goals. But if she doesn't really have a goal, other than to grow up, there's nothing for us to latch onto emotionally. So, by "episodic" I mean a series of vignettes that are disconnected from an over-arching goal, i.e., something the protagonist is trying to achieve that makes up the "meat" of the story.

I watched "Persepolis" with a feeling of detached amusement, and general hopefulness that Marjane the cartoon character would at least grow into adulthood (which I already knew the real Marjane had managed, so no suspense there). And I certainly appreciated the insider's perspective on this piece of history. But ultimately, to tell an entire life story, one that encompasses weighty political and cultural current events lessons, is a lot to ask an audience to connect with emotionally.

(This is why many successful biopics -- "Capote" and "Schindler's List" come to mind -- focus on a discrete period of the subject's life and manage to convey with great feeling the challenges that person faced. Which may explain why, despite the narrative shortcomings I describe, the largely Iranian-American audience at the screening I attended seemed to love "Persepolis", having their own personal and emotional touchstone by which to connect to the film.)

I left the theater feeling better informed on several levels. But not really touched.
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10/10
Wonderful story and animation
Imdbidia7 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
A wonderful autobiographical story of Iranian artist -and movie co-director- Marjane Satrapi, told through animation.

I loved the minimalism of the animation, very schematic but attentive to the detail, very newspaper's cartoon-looking, contemporary an artistic, but still unpretentious. The story is presented mostly in a black and white flashback. The tones and shadows of B&W are superb, and the absence of color gives the story a warmth, perspective and seriousness that color alone would have not. B&W is perfect here for presenting past treasured moments full of dreams, hope, ideals, music, smells and happy family times. On the other hand, the BW gives the story the emotional detachment necessary to present many of the hard themes presented in the film: oppression, depression, war, censorship, torture, and loneliness, among others.

There is a lot of humor in this movie, too. Just some of Satrapi's love stories are hilariously presented despite their drama and impact on her. The black market of Western Music just put a big smile in my face. Also delightful is the presence of little street animals (cats, dogs, worms) in general scenes, which create an atmosphere of proximity and tenderness even in the saddest moments.

Persepolis reminded me sometimes of the freshness and creativity of "Sita Sings the Blues" and also in the way different animation sub-styles are used within the movie. For example, here the story of how the Shas of Persia got into power is very "puppetish" while the recreation of the different movies watched on TV (Terminator and Godzilla) are very hard, powerful and definitely modern comic.

This movie, and the story it tells, opens the eyes to many people (especially to those with prejudices, even if they are not negative) about what does mean and feel like being Iranian and Middle Eastern in Europe, and a certain type of Iranian and woman in Iran, but also how it feels to be and feel a foreigner abroad an in your own country, feelings that are all Universal.

I would have liked the movie to go a little bit further in Satrapi's life and include at least the death of her grandmother. However, I did love the very last scene, an homage to that wonderful woman who was Satrapi's nanna.

This is sort of movie that will bore to death to movie consumers and that will captivate the experimental and animation lover. The mix is intellectually elating and emotionally absorbing, and feeds the viewer hungry for animation that is different, daring, and meaningful. Go and grab it right now in French with subtitles PLEASEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
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7/10
I know that I am not with the majority on this one, but...
planktonrules17 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I know that I am not with the majority on this, but I was not bowled over by PERSEPOLIS. In fact, the only reason I scored the film as high as 7 was because of the simple but effective artistic style. The animation was somewhat reminiscent of Charles Addams' drawings and most of the film was done in simple black & white.

As for the story, the idea of showing the history of modern Iran from the Revolution of 1978 through the 1990s was a great idea. The Iranian government protested against the showing of this film because they don't want any open discussion or dissent. However, I feel that its important to be open and honest about their "people's revolution" and what it is like to live in this country today. Good for the film makers to address the effects of this Islamist government on the everyday lives of its people.

However, this brings me to what I didn't like and why I just couldn't get super-excited about the film. In most films, I want to be able to connect with the leading character--to respect and care about them. However, after a while, the young lady in the film just seemed like an incredibly selfish and difficult to like person. Because of this, the film was confusing and just seemed to drag. You see in the second half of the film that as the girl matured, she showed that she wasn't exactly a person to be admired. I was especially horrified when she sent the religious police after some innocent guy just to divert suspicion away from herself...and later laughed about it! The guy could have been beaten or arrested--you'll never know.

Overall, an interesting portrait--at least for the first half. Then, it, like the nation, loses direction and becomes a film that should have been named "Rebel Without a Cause".

By the way, there is an English language and a French language version--I saw the French one with subtitles.
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9/10
Politics and identity are the film's driving force, although is smartly perfunctory in making each of them not the cause or the effect.
crey01410 October 2008
Inspired from Marjane Satrapi's graphic novels, "Persepolis" is a cinematic tour de force. Beautifully conceived and written, it never pulls punches as it chronicles the adventures of its protagonist while being able to display certain truths that have never been produced in a more digestible fashion. Even if the film is in black and white, ideas nevertheless go though the entire spectrum, with emphasis on integrity, courage and character: virtues that usually suffer in an incarcerating environment.

Divided in three acts, film follows Marjane Satrapi as she navigates through an oppressive environment, in both Iran and Austria, while on the lookout for her identity and self worth. As opposed to this year's "Waltz with Bashir", an animated political documentary, "Persepolis" is definitely a production of fiction and does not frame reality verbatim, however it paints a picture to Satrapi's personal experiences as close as possible. Politics and identity are the film's driving force, although is smartly perfunctory in making each of them not the cause or the effect.

Each frame is beautiful to look at and has definitely gone above and beyond its comic book counterpart. Using hand drawn techniques and a sense of whimsy missing from mechanical mainstream animated features, "Persepolis" cements that story is essential as an axis in storytelling. With a mainly black and white palette, the picture is nevertheless colorful with its depiction of characters, all of them inspiring and definitely breaks taboos on a stereotypical view of Persian living.

To contrast the film and its graphic novel roots is made redundant by its production, as it's conscious to steer clear from recreating the panels as is. Film is more cinematic in approach and fully takes advantage of its use of music and color. As opposed to the novel's more linear story telling, "Persepolis" follows a mainly flashback driven narrative which further emphasizes main protagonist's faint sense of nostalgia. Music is also used to much effect, as sequences involving popular music will be marked as a highlight, clearly in absentia from the novel. The overall effect is interesting: both mediums become more complementary rather than a substitute.

Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, "Persepolis" definitely establishes a lasting experience. It knows how to balance its political influence and its personality that it never becomes overbearing and driven by a vendetta. The film's universal appeal is exceptional as even if it goes through specifics about Iran's historical political development, narrative is still driven by its protagonist. And with a character like Marjane, who has been easily compared to Juno multiple times, she's definitely worth cheering for.
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7/10
Starts as a 10, ends as a 5
Red-12518 February 2008
Persepolis (2007) was written and directed by Vincent Paronnaud and Marjane Satrapi. This animated film is based on the coming-of-age graphic novel by Ms. Satrapi. In the film, Marjane--a young Iranian woman--is played by Chiara Mastoianni. Catherine Deneuve plays Marjane's mother and Danielle Darrieux is her grandmother.

The film starts off in a strong, fascinating fashion. As a young girl, Marjane and her family are caught up in the struggle against the Shah. When the Shah is overthrown, the revolution falls into the hands of Islamic fundamentalists, and many of the revolutionaries, including members of Marjane's family, are imprisoned. Marjane appears to have become a young woman of strength and dignity--not easy at that time and in that place.

Unfortunately, the film winds down at the midpoint. Marjane's family are able to send her to Vienna, where she makes a series of bad decisions. Ultimately, she returns to Iran and the bad decisions continue. By the time the film ends, Marjane, as portrayed, hasn't maintained the strength and dignity that made her so admirable as a young adolescent.

It's hard to know how much of the story is autobiographical. If Ms. Satrapi is showing us her life, it's hard to argue that she should go back and live it differently. On the other hand, if Ms. Satrapi and Mr. Paronnaud are trying to use Ms. Satrapi's life to teach us something, or to send us a message, I don't think they've succeeded.

It's too bad things turned out this way. I had high hopes for the film, and for the little girl who went through her house shouting, "Down with the Shah!"
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5/10
A good movie for children
MacacoBanditi5 January 2012
Interesting demographics from IMDb: the age group that rated this movie the highest is "males under 18" (8.6). That is an enlightening piece of data.

In a nutshell the story is about an upper middle class girl in Teheran who grows up witnessing the political turbulence in 1970s Iran. That could make a good story, the problem is that "witnessing" may be too strong a word here, "staring blankly" would be closer to the mark. The protagonist does not seem to commit, care or even remotely understand any of the events around her and this applies to her at ALL ages depicted in the movie. It's flabbergasting to me how some reviewers could find her character engaging, while others go as far as praising her "courage". This is plain insulting to people who put their bodies on the line while the little spoiled brat just went to Vienna and Paris to drink, smoke and date as many dull and stupid guys as she could. And when she gets bored she goes back to Iran, because she loves her homeland so much (?).

The expressionistic visuals are good, but certainly fail to convey the drama of the revolution, war, and other emotional events depicted in the movie, rather lending them a surreal feel that is not what it should be like for relatively recent historical events. No single character has any depth to them, and this is not due to the movie being an animation. With the exception of the uncle everyone's motivations are shallow and hedonistic, which is not what you would expect in such turbulent times.

In a country of 75 million I'd bet my house that any random 40-year-old person you picked on the street would have a more interesting and engaging walk of life than the director/protagonist of this movie. But as the IMDb demographics show, if you are under 18, you'll probably like "Persepolis", learn some basics about a country called Iran and your 90 minutes will not be wasted.
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