Average Rating: 8.9/10
Reviews Counted: 82
Fresh: 81 | Rotten: 1
Through simple means and filming, This is Not a Film presents a vital political statement and a snapshot of life in Iran as enemy of the state.
Average Rating: 8.9/10
Critic Reviews: 27
Fresh: 26 | Rotten: 1
Through simple means and filming, This is Not a Film presents a vital political statement and a snapshot of life in Iran as enemy of the state.
liked it
Average Rating: 3.7/5
User Ratings: 5,851
This clandestine documentary, shot partially on an iPhone and smuggled into France in a cake for a last-minute submission to Cannes, depicts the day-to-day life of acclaimed director Jafar Panahi (Offside, The Circle) during his house arrest in his Tehran apartment. While appealing his sentence - six years in prison and a 20 year ban from filmmaking - Panahi is seen talking to his family and lawyer on the phone, discussing his plight with Mirtahmasb and reflecting on the meaning of the art of
Unrated, 1 hr. 15 min.
Documentary, Art House & International, Special Interest
All Critics (82) | Top Critics (27) | Fresh (81) | Rotten (1)
Not a conventional film, certainly, but a powerful and important statement.
There is courage and cheekiness here. What there is not is a story, or much insight or even anger; anyone expecting an indictment of Iran will be sorely disappointed.
Truly and defiantly extraordinary in its own quiet way.
This may not be a film, but it's a moving statement of defiance and despair.
It's a cry from the heart of an artist compelled to create, tell stories and respond to hostile, confounding realities.
In short, "This Is Not a Film" is the world within an apartment, and it is quietly devastating.
No matter the constrictions on its existence, This is Not a Film is, in fact, a great one.
One mourns the tragic circumstances that caused it to be made, but the result is a sleight of hand to rank alongside Orson Welles's F for Fake.
See it any way you possibly can. It will change your life forever.
This Is Not a Film is a practical joke as much as it is a movie, and while it possesses a deadly serious undercurrent, what's most surprising is how witty the finished product is.
The complex, brilliant, heartbreaking diary of Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi under house arrest in Tehran, and prohibited from making movies.
I find myself returning again and again to Jafar Panahi's apartment in Tehran, the defining location for the year in cinema, one of the defining locations in all of cinema.
"This Is Not a Film", but it manages to be a bloody great one, anyway.
The truth of what is and isn't lies deep between the lines of this brilliantly elusive meta-commentary, arguably the greatest Iranian film since Abbas Kiarostami's masterpiece Close-Up.
Predictably, not much happens in "This Is Not a Film"; dude is under house arrest, after all. But it's absorbing and clever.
What constitutes imprisonment and what constitutes a film?
[A] courageous act of artistic provocation...
Panahi creates a very personal film that reveals the inner man. His pet iguana, Igi, is pretty cool, too.
...never settles down - it's as restless as its house arrested protagonist and a compelling and often humorous look at a day in the life of an auteur with his wings clipped.
A snapshot of a filmmaker in exile, yes, but also a poignant portrait of a country under a repressive regime and a compelling manifesto on the perseverance of art.
Super Reviewer
Super Reviewer
There are no discussion threads for This Is Not a Film yet.
13% | A Good Day To Die Hard | Feb 14 |
47% | Beautiful Creatures | Feb 14 |
13% | Safe Haven | Feb 14 |
24% | Identity Thief | $34.6M |
78% | Warm Bodies | $11.4M |
86% | Side Effects | $9.3M |
92% | Silver Linings Playbook | $6.4M |
15% | Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters | $5.8M |
63% | Mama | $4.2M |
93% | Zero Dark Thirty | $4.0M |
96% | Argo | $2.4M |
89% | Django Unchained | $2.3M |
49% | Bullet to the Head | $2.1M |
100% | 56 Up | Jan 04 |
96% | Monsters, Inc. 3D | Dec 19 |
96% | West of Memphis | Dec 25 |
95% | The Central Park Five | Nov 23 |
94% | Barbara | Dec 21 |
A Bad Day for Die Hard Fans
Discontinued Academy Awards
The week's best premiere photos
Bruce Willis movies in pictures
I was excited when I first heard about this "film," and I love the basic idea for the project. Jafar Panahi, the Iranian filmmaker who has been put under house arrest and prohibited from making films, records the various goings-on in his Teheran apartment using his iPhone. It sounded to me like a great testament to human creativity.
You can steal a filmmaker's camera and lock him up, but he will find a way to create! I also love how 21st-century technology undercuts fascist governments at every turn.
I couldn't wait to see what Panahi would have to say from the confines of his house arrest. What a shock to learn that he has almost nothing to say. If you're going to work so hard to create clandestine footage and smuggle it out of Iran, at least have something to say!
All we see is Panahi puttering about the house, feeding his pet iguana, and answering the phone! We also watch him help the building's superintendent take out the trash. All the while we hear the sound of fireworks going off in the background, as it's some kind of holiday in the country. Initially it sounded like gunfire. But no, just fireworks.
After an hour, it's over. This is hardly a testament to human creativity. It's an attempt to milk cash out of the cinephiles around the world who have championed Panahi's cause. This will probably top my Worst of 2012 List.