" Did you say it might take a while?" " It's OK." " We could phone them." " No, it's OK." "It could take till tonight, depending on how things go." " It's a strange story." " Really?" "Well, it seems that someone has been passing himself off as Mohsen Makhmalbaf, do you know him?" " A businessman?" " No, not at all." "Do I turn left here?" "He's not a businessman, he's a filmmaker." " Do you know him?" " No." "The Cyclist is his latest film." "I've no time for the cinema!" "He's a filmmaker, but his face isn't very well-known." "And this guy told a family he was Makhmalbaf." "It's not clear what his intentions were." "He chose a few members of this family to be actors and told them their house was ideal as the location for his next film." "But no one knows what his intentions really are." "I'm a journalist and I'm going there to cover his arrest." " You're a journalist?" " For Sorush Magazine." "I thought you were a policeman!" "That's funny!" "I was told about this case and I thought it would make a good story." "I'm going to follow this case through to the end." "You don't hear of a story like this every day." "Godsends like this only come a couple of times in your career." "It's a hot news item." "Sensational news." "The kind of news that boosts sales." "It's what I call an Oriana-style story." "By the way, do you know Fallaci?" "No." "Bogdanovich?" "Edisson?" "They're fellow journalists." "They're not my clients!" "But they're fellow journalists." "They write sensational reports." "Oriana Fallaci writes some very original articles." "She has a gift for finding stories that no one else does." "She has a worldwide reputation." "And I'm sure this is a new Oriana-style report." "I must find out if he had any illicit plans such as stealing from them." "I'll know that once he's been arrested, so I'll need you till tonight." " Fine by me." " Good." "Give your boss a call when we get there." "It's OK, I don't work for them full-time anyway." "I'm a retired fighter pilot." "I'm one of the ground staff now!" "Funny, a pilot working on the ground!" "That could be a good scoop, too!" " Left here?" " Yes." " To Lavizan?" " Yes, then Hosseinabad Avenue." "Lavizan is a nice area." "I lived there before the Revolution." "I left when the unrest started at the Lavizan garrison." "When the soldiers rioted..." "I haven't been back since." "We're going to Javanshir Avenue." "Keep going, I'll ask someone the way." "Let's see if this boy can help." " Excuse me." "Where's Javanshir Avenue?" " I don't know." " He doesn't know." " Ask an adult." "Let's ask this man." "Excuse me." "Where is Golzar Avenue?" "I don't know." " Want a turkey?" " No." "We're off to see a family who were made turkeys of!" "How did you hear of this story?" "A composer friend called me and said strange things were afoot in his friend's house." "It's a strange place to choose." "Where's Golzar Avenue?" "Straight on, then left just after the supermarket." " Straight on, then left?" " Yes." "Thanks." "This is a once-in-a-lifetime story for a journalist." "You can't imagine how impatient I am to see this report on the front page." "It'll cause a sensation." "Everyone in TV and cinema will talk about it." "Let me see..." "First Avenue off Golzar Avenue." "Here it is." "First Avenue." "That way." "Is this it?" "Yes, but it's a dead end." "It's strange that this sensational news should come from a dead end!" "Just my luck!" "12... 14... 16..." "Here it is." "What a strange place." " Wait here." " OK." " Yes?" " Hello, it's Mr Farazmand." "He might see you from the window." "Stay in the car till I call you." "Tell the plaintiff to bring his complaint and his ID papers." " Complaint and papers." " Right." "Don't the police have their own vehicle?" "Yes, they do." "The journalist will have quite a bill to pay." " Smoke?" " No, thanks." " Where are you from?" " Ispahan." "Funny..." "I'm from Tehran and I did national service in Ispahan." "And you do the opposite!" "That's fate!" " Are you from Ispahan too?" " No, Borujerd." "Actually I'm not from Ispahan, but a village near Naeem." " Naeem's near Yazd, right?" " Yes, my village is Jandagh." " How long do you have left?" " I've done one year." "I still have two years to do, because I'm not married." "I'm off to the front soon." " Where?" " Kurdistan." " Near Baneh?" " Yes." "It'll be over soon." "Then you can go home and get married!" "As long as God grants you good health..." " And you?" " I'm married." " Any children?" " Yes, one." "God bless him." " Mr Abolfazl Ahankhah?" " Yes." " Is he armed?" " I don't think so." "Hang on!" "I've forgotten my case." "Look, if you tell me the truth..." "I can help you." "To you I'm just a crook." "Did he have one?" "There's no one home." "But I really need a tape recorder." "Go to HQ." "I'll see you there." " What about the fare?" " How much is it?" "350 tomans." "Mr Ahankhah, give me 200 tomans." "Sorry about this." "Here." "I'll join you at HQ." "I have to find a tape recorder." " We don't know them." " I need one." " Yes?" " It was a mistake!" "They're away." " Yes?" " Excuse me, I'm Mr Farazmand." "I'm a journalist and friend of your neighbour, Mr Ahankhah." "I need a portable tape recorder." "We don't have a recorder." "Thanks anyway." " Yes?" " Excuse me, I'm Mr Farazmand." "I'm a journalist and friend of your neighbour, Mr Ahankhah." " I need a tape recorder." " We don't have one." " You don't have one?" " No." "I'm Mr Farazmand..." " Mr Farazmand!" " Yes?" "Here's one." "You'll get it back." "CLOSE-UP" "Screenplay:" "A Kiarostami Based on a true story" "Appearing as themselves H Sabzian, H Farazmand" "A Ahankhah, M Ahankhah N M Zanoozi, A M Mohseni and Mohsen Makhmalbaf" "Photography A R Zarindast" "Producer A R Zarin" "Directed and edited by Abbas Kiarostami" "BOGUS MAKHMALBAF ARRESTED" " Who's in charge?" " Captain Bashiri." " Can I see him?" " I'll call him." "Captain!" "Someone to see you." " Hello, Captain." " Hello." "I read in Sorush Magazine that a certain Hossein Sabzian was arrested by your men." "Yes, we have a copy of the magazine." "Do you want to see it?" "Barati, bring me the magazine." "I already read the article, but could you give me some more details?" "I don't remember." "It was two weeks ago." "As you can see, we're very busy here." "Could you give me... the address of the house where it happened?" "I'll have to check the file." "Go get it." " Two weeks ago?" " Yes." "It was published recently!" "One week after it happened." " Was he detained here?" " For a few days." "What kind of man is he?" "He claimed to be quite religious." "Were you there when he was arrested?" "Yes." " Did he resist arrest?" " Not at all." " What kind of man is he?" " He surrendered..." " Pardon me?" " He didn't struggle." " What kind of man is he?" " Not the kind to do such things." "What do you mean?" "He didn't look the kind who plans a fraud." " Not the kind..." " Not at all." "I'd like Mr Ahankhah's address." "You seem to know a lot about it." "His house is..." "I'll note it down." "Number 16, First Avenue off Golzar Avenue in Lavizan." "Mr Kiarostami, the people concerned by this case wish to be presented in a favorable light." "Mr Farazmand claimed that the truth would not have come out if it hadn't been for him." "That's not true." "I knew exactly what was going on and I always had the situation perfectly under control." "I played along with him, so it'd serve as a lesson to my children." "But you're giving me a different version and I'm confused." "The report doesn't tell the whole story." "What do you mean by that?" "The article portrays us as simple people." "That's not true." "What do you mean?" "I like the movies, but that doesn't mean" "I'd do what it says in the article." "I was glad my mother met Mr Makhmalbaf." "That's a fact." "I thought that meeting him could've been useful to me, too." "I have a degree in civil engineering, but I haven't yet found a job in my field." "And my brother, who's a mechanical engineer, sells bread." "Mehrdad..." "I had the choice between art and selling bread." "I chose art." "Manuchehr doesn't sell bread." "He's the director of a bread factory.." "But Mom, come on..." "Could you speak Persian?" "It's true, my brother didn't do all those studies to sell bread." "When did you graduate?" "Six months ago." "I'm sure you'll soon find a good job." "Amir, Hossein and Hushang graduated over a year ago and only Amir got a job for six months." "The factories aren't hiring." "They lack raw materials." "I came to talk about Mr Sabzian." "Can you tell me anything about him?" " Where is he now?" " In prison." " Where?" " Ghasr." " Hello." "Mr Sabzian?" " Yes." " Detained for?" " Attempted fraud." "You have a visitor." " Are you well?" " Yes, thanks." " Do you know me?" " Yes." "I read a report on you and I decided to come see you." " In what magazine?" " Sorush." "Apparently you're interested in cinema." "As I'm a filmmaker, I wanted to talk to you." " And you are..." " Kiarostami." "I'm surprised, Mr Kiarostami." "I've seen your films." "Can I do anything for you?" "You could make a film about my suffering." "I can't promise anything, but I'd like to talk to you." "What did they write about me?" "That I'm a crook?" "Apparently you confessed to attempted fraud." "Yes, I did confess." " But I'm not a crook." " Really?" "Why did you confess you were, then?" "Because what I did looks like fraud from the outside." " But what is it really?" " I'm interested in cinema." "How long have you been in prison?" "I'm not sure." " About three weeks." " When's the trial?" "I don't know." "The courts don't like this kind of case." "I'll try to bring your trial forward." "I'd be grateful." "I have no more questions, Captain." "I have a message for Mr Makhmalbaf." "What is it?" "Tell him The Cyclist is a part of me." "I'll tell him." "If you'll excuse me..." "Goodbye." "Goodbye." "Tell me if you need anything." " Which block are you in?" " Block 5." " Nothing you need?" " No." "We came on Tuesday concerning the Sabzian case." "I don't remember." "The man who pretended to be Mr Makhmalbaf." "I have stacks of files." "I can't remember everyone's name..." "Could you be more precise?" "I came on Tuesday." "You said you'd speak to Haj Agha and tell us his answer." "We'd like to film the trial." "That's right, I remember now." "I passed it on to Haj Agha." "Excuse me, did you study the Sabzian file?" " The one you want to film?" " Yes." "Yes." "We need your authorization to shoot our film." "We'd like the date of the trial to be brought forward." "It was set for January 19, but we'd like it brought forward." "Yes, it was January 19." "Why do you want it brought forward?" "What's the rush?" "For our shooting schedule." "We also need a permit... to film in the courtroom." "There's nothing about this case that's worth filming." " Did you study the file?" " Yes." "This case interests us, because it has a connection... with the cinema." "Do you have more interesting cases?" "We have cases where the charges are more serious." "This is a small fraud case concerning the fact that he received 1,900 tomans from Mr Ahankhah apparently to take a taxi." "He also passed himself off as Mr Makhmalbaf." "Will you allow us to film in the courtroom?" "Only if the authorities allow it." " That is?" " The Department of Justice." "If they OK it, I will." " We have your agreement?" " You do." "Scene 1, Shot 1, Law Courts, December 10." "Mr Sabzian, do you remember me?" "We've met before." "Yes, Ghasr Prison." "We'd like to film the trial." "Do you agree to us doing that?" "Yes." "Because you're my audience." " Who is?" " You are." "Why's that?" " Because of my passion." " Which passion?" "Art." "Film." "We have two cameras, one with a close-up lens." " Know what a close-up is?" " Yes." " The other camera..." " No, I don't know." "It's used to zoom in on things." "The other lens, a wide-angle, films the proceedings." "This one stays on you all the time." "When I met you in prison, you told me you would plead guilty." "But certain things are more complex than they seem." "This camera is here so you can explain things which people might find it hard to understand." "They will begin by reading the charges." "If anything seems unacceptable to you from a legal point of view and you wish to explain, address this camera." "OK." " Are you ready?" " Yes." "In the name of God..." "The accused, Mr Hossein Sabzian." "Who are the plaintiffs?" "Mr Ahankhah, Mrs Mohseni and Mehrdad Ahankhah." " Three plaintiffs in all?" " Yes." "Before we proceed, I invite the two parties to settle their differences amicably." "If the plaintiffs do not wish to withdraw their complaint, we shall begin the trial." "As the head of the family, I am not in a position to withdraw my complaint." "I've asked my son Mehrdad to talk on our behalf." "Very well." "Let us begin." "Mr Ahankhah, could you give us your side of the story?" "Mr Hossein Sabzian approached our family... passing himself off as Mr Makhmalbaf... and was clearly intending... at best... to commit fraud... and at worst, a burglary." "He was thwarted... thanks to my father's vigilance... and was arrested." "THE CYCLIST" "Excuse me, where did you get that book?" "Where did you buy that book?" "In a bookshop." "Could you give me the address?" "You can have it." "No, thank you." "I want to buy it." "It's yours." "I wrote it." " You wrote it?" " Yes." "Are you Mr Makhmalbaf?" " Yes." " Pleased to meet you." "That's very kind of you." "I'll sign it for you." " Thank you." " You're welcome." "How come you use public transport to get around?" "Why does that surprise you?" "Famous directors usually use their own cars." "They don't take the bus." "I often take the bus to look for interesting subjects." "Did you see my film?" "Yes, with my children." "I liked it a lot." " Just once?" " Yes." "You have to see it several times to fully understand it." "My children were more interested." "Really?" "Yes, my two sons." " They're engineers." " Which was more interested?" "The younger one was more enthusiastic." " He saw it, too?" " Yes, we saw it together." " What did he think about it?" " He liked it." " Did he have any questions?" " No." "What does he do?" "Both my sons are engineers." "The elder one's a mechanical engineer." "He works in a bread factory in Mazandaran." "The younger one doesn't have a job yet." "He helps out at a computing firm." "He studied civil engineering." "My daughter here just took her university entrance exams." "Oh, she's your daughter, is she?" "She has finished her schooling." "What are your son's interests?" "He's interested in art and literature." "Has he written any screenplays?" "Just for himself." " He's interested in cinema?" " Yes, he is." " And drawing?" " Yes, that's his specialty." "So he's interested in art?" "Very much so." "My sons will be thrilled to hear" "I met you." "If they wish, they can contact me." "What's your address?" "It's on the back, along with the phone number." "Thank you." "I'll tell them." "Could I have your number?" "Then, I could call them." "Here's some paper." "I have a pen, too." " Here's your pen." " Thanks." "What's your name?" "Ahankhah." "Stop, I want to get off." " You want to get off?" " Yes." "Excuse me." " I hope I'll see you again." " Thank you." "What do you mean by "fraud"?" "What exactly did he do?" "Well, he passed himself off as Mr Makhmalbaf, the filmmaker." "He examined all the rooms of the house, pretending he wanted to film there," "so as to gather information to carry out a burglary." "Mr Hossein Sabzian, you are accused of fraud and attempted fraud." "You are to defend yourself on these two counts." "Do you acknowledge the charges you are accused of?" "If you do, explain how you intended to carry them out." "The burglary..." "You're not on trial for that." "You are accused of fraud and attempted fraud." "I never intended to defraud anyone." "Legally, it might be an acceptable charge." "But morally, it is not." "This all arose from my love of the arts." "As a child, I often went to the cinema." "I played at making films with my friends." "But as I didn't have the means," "I had to abandon my artistic pretensions." "It became an obsession." "A crook, however, deliberately changes his appearance." "He comes along in a borrowed car, carrying a briefcase... so he looks convincing." "I never did that." "That was not my intention." "What was your motive for passing yourself off as Mr Makhmalbaf?" "Tell the court." "I admire him, because he... portrays suffering in his films." "In fact, he spoke out for people like me, especially in Marriage of the Blessed." "Just like Mr Kiarostami did in The Traveller." "I'm like the little boy in the film who takes photos of people although his camera isn't loaded, so he can go to Tehran to see a soccer match." "But he falls asleep and misses the match." "I too have the feeling I missed the match." "I know that my actions can't be justified legally, but my love of art should be taken into account." "You haven't answered the question." "Why did you pass yourself off as Mr Makhmalbaf if you didn't intend to commit fraud?" "Wouldn't you call that fraud?" "I liked interpreting this character." "One of the plaintiffs claims that the accused received 1,900 tomans from him." "Tell us about that." "On leaving the house after his first visit, he saw a motorbike." "He asked me if it belonged to me." "He asked me to give him a lift home." "So I agreed." "As we left... he said that if anything happened to him... his admirers and his film crew... would avenge him by coming to our house and ransacking it." "We laughed at that." "As we rode along... he answered me as if he were Makhmalbaf." "He talked about his filmmaking." "I asked him a few questions." "He answered my questions sometimes very intelligently, sometimes very evasively." "I just thought that he didn't want to expand on every aspect of his filmmaking." "Then he said he'd had an interesting idea for a film." "He said, "Two people are on a motorbike..." ""and one loses his wallet."" "I asked if that had happened to him and he said yes." "As he got off, he said he needed some money." "I thought that, to get home, he'd need 50 or 100 tomans." "But he said that he needed to buy something costing 1,500 tomans." "When I gave him the money, he said he needed another 500, that 2,000 would be perfect." "I kept 50 back... because I needed some myself." "And I gave him the rest." "He put it in his pocket." "Then he said that the screenplay that he had conceived finished like that..." "One of the two men, the one with some money, lent some to the one who had lost his money." "And it was the start of a great friendship." "I was delighted to have met a director who was humble enough to borrow money off me." " Did you receive 1,900 tomans?" " Yes." "Did you need the money or was it... just to test his generosity?" "I did need the money." "Does that justify your actions?" "No." "With the court's permission, tell us the reason for your behavior and why you chose to pass yourself off as Makhmalbaf." "Being Makhmalbaf was very difficult." "Why's that?" "You yourself decided to be him." "It was hard for me... to assume his identity." "It wasn't easy to be believable doing that." " What?" " Being Makhmalbaf." "It was hard to play the part of a director." "But it gave me self-confidence." "And I won their respect." " Whose respect?" " The members of the family." "They did everything I told them." "If I'd asked them, say, to move a cupboard, or to cut down a tree, they would have done it." "Before that, I'd never been able to get my views across." "People were reluctant to do what I said." "But then, by acting like this famous person," "I made them all obey me." "When I left the house and I had to accept the money to buy something for my son and pay for my trip home, I realized... that I was still a poor guy who couldn't even support his family" "and who lived in a godforsaken place." "When I woke up the next day and still had no job," "I understood nothing had changed." "It was hard to go on playing this part." "It was very hard to pretend to be someone else." "But at the same time, I liked it... above all, because they respected me and supported me morally." "So I really got into the part." "I started to believe I actually was a director." "I really felt it." "I wasn't acting any more." "I really became this new character." "But when I left that place and went home at the end of the day," "I had to shed my character and that was hard for me." "Did the money make it easier for you to go on playing this role?" "Yes, a director cannot be poor." "He must have money." "He cannot be so poor that he is unable to give his family the means to get by with dignity." "That's why it was so hard for me to go on with my role as director the next few days." "On the other hand, they trusted me and their trust gave me confidence." "It gave you confidence that he lent you money?" "Yes, when he lent me money," "I realized that he was convinced that I was a director." "You didn't intend to give it back?" "I did, but..." "I didn't know how I could go about doing it." "On top of that... he was so keen on acting in a film that I would've loved to have the means to make one." "We began to have doubts the following Thursday." "He insisted we all go see the film The Cyclist." "He said we could discuss the film, that it'd serve as a point of departure for our film, The House of the Spider." "The Cyclist was on at two cinemas." "One was near our house." "But he wanted us to go to the one that was a long way from our home." "He claimed that it was showing a less censored version of the film, so we had to see it in this cinema." "That's one of the things that started us thinking." "When we pointed out that we didn't have a car, he said that it didn't matter." "He even asked a friend of ours to take his father's car." "He said that he wouldn't come with us." "Otherwise his admirers would bother us outside the cinema." "Mr Sabzian, did you hear that?" "Spite is a veil to conceal art." "What?" "Spite is a veil to conceal art." "I should like to ask Mr Ahankhah... who accuses me of intent to burgle his house..." "You are not accused of that." "He merely mentioned it in passing." "It's not on record." "So disregard that." "They claimed that you were part of a gang who were planning a burglary." "I categorically deny that." "They thought you wanted to force them out of their house so your accomplices could go in and steal their possessions." " Was that your intention?" " No." "But you admit you wanted to misappropriate Makhmalbaf's name." "Yes." "As he has explained, and you confirmed, he had no intent to steal anything." "But it isn't clear why he wanted the whole family to go to the cinema." "If you don't mind, I'd like him to explain his motives for doing this." "I wanted them to see the film so that they would acquire a greater interest in the cinema" "and have more respect for me as a director." "I wanted them to see me as a director who is aware" "of people's sufferings and difficulties." "A director who is modest enough to mingle with ordinary folk." "I wanted to make them forget the idea that a film director is different from other people." "A director should have humility." "I wanted them to realize that a true artist is someone who is close to the people and is prepared to go to the cinema with them." "But as they didn't accept my proposition," "I suggest they go on their own." "I went there by bus and when I arrived in front of the cinema," "I saw that they were already there." "They hadn't seen me..." "I went up to them and I said... that I'd been waiting for them a long time." "They asked me how I'd come." "I told them I'd been careful not to be recognized because people would have crowded round me to ask for autographs." "What would you have done if someone had taken you for Makhmalbaf?" "If it had been outside the cinema," "I'd have tried not to attract attention, but I sensed..." "Would you have followed him and been his Makhmalbaf as well?" "I think I would have." "How long after his visit to your house was he arrested?" "When he left us on the Tuesday, he said he liked me and that he wanted to give me the lead role in his next film." "He added that he'd be back to see us." "He said he'd come to lunch that Thursday." "And that soup was his favorite dish." "How long after you met was he arrested?" "And on what grounds?" "He came to our house three times in four days." "On the Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday." "Describe the circumstances that led to his arrest." "Actually, my father suspected him from the start." "He talked it over with Mr Mohseni." "The description he gave corresponded to Mr Sabzian." "Mr Mohseni, you've been following all this from the outset." "Everything has happened as I anticipated it would." "But Mehrdad said there was no reason to suspect him." "Fortunately, something happened yesterday which convinced him that he wasn't Makhmalbaf." "Yesterday, the so-called Makhmalbaf came to rehearse with the children." "Mehrdad arrived with a newspaper." "And he said, "Congratulations, Mr Makhmalbaf!"" "He was confused and didn't know what to say." "The newspaper said that a prize had been given to The Cyclist at the Rimini Festival." "But he didn't seem to know anything about it." "He got out of it by saying that this prize was for the music of the film." " He was thinking of Fajr Festival." " Probably." "They continued their rehearsals." "But Mehrdad was convinced that it wasn't Makhmalbaf." "But sometimes the director doesn't hear of these things right away." "No, the newspaper said Mr Makhmalbaf had sent a wire to the festival." "So he had to know about the award." "They continued the rehearsals, then went to the cinema." "As we left the cinema, he expressed the wish to come home with us and spend the night at our house." "He came home and spent the night here." "The next day, at around six am," "I heard him talking with Mehrdad." "He said he wanted to go... mountain climbing." "Mehrdad was sure he wouldn't come back." "But he lent him his coat so he wouldn't catch cold." "We thought we'd never see him again, but luckily... or unluckily..." "he phoned 30 minutes ago." "He asked Mehrdad to go to town to pick him up." "So off he went and they'll be here any moment now." "Like I told you, my friend knows artistic circles very well." "I hope this man really is Makhmalbaf." "Excuse me." "I can hear a motorbike coming." " Hello." "How are you?" " Fine, thanks." " My friend, Mr Mohseni." " Pleased to meet you." "Do sit down." " How are you?" " Fine, thank you." "I hope you had a good night's sleep." "I didn't." " No?" " I didn't sleep at all." "I'm sorry you didn't find our house comfortable." "One often sleeps badly in someone else's place." "And yet a sage feels at home anywhere." "I'm no sage." "You look like one though." "Appearances can be deceptive." "Mr Makhmalbaf, have you eaten?" "I had a big breakfast." "But I'll gladly join you." "At the weekend, our children get up late and just have lunch." "But I can make you an omelette." "No, I'm not really hungry." "Whether you're a sage or not, all we can offer you is an omelette." "That's fine." "Make him an omelette." "Do you often go up in the mountains, Mr Makhmalbaf?" "Sometimes." "But this morning, when I looked at the mountains," "I felt the urge to get closer to nature." "Being close to nature lifts the burden of worries from your breast." "One must be in touch with nature..." ""I asked the Muse why she was hiding." ""She replied, 'It's you who are hiding."'" "We are the slaves of a mask which hides our true face." "If we manage to free ourselves of this, the beauty of truth will be ours." "This morning I wanted to go up in the mountains to study myself." "Nature is a mirror in which we can study ourselves." "If you like nature so much, you should live a natural life." "Mehrdad, you don't look as if you're ready for rehearsals." "I'm waiting for the others." "You're wasting my time." "Have your meal." "What do you see as being unnatural about me?" "That's not what I meant." "I just wanted to stress the fact that most people rest on a Friday." "When there's work to be done, it doesn't matter what day it is." "We have so little time..." "That's why I always give priority to my work." "Rest comes later." "You never know what tomorrow will bring." "You can't predict the future." "Even the immediate future." "That's why we must try to make the most of the opportunities that come our way." "That's what I'm doing." "It's rare you get the opportunity to work." "You can't always choose when to rest." "That's why I don't stop working on a Friday or during the summer." "I love my work and I have to finish it before I can rest." "There are so many days in the week when we are unable to work." "I'm prepared to work day and night as long as your boys maintain their enthusiasm." "But I sense that their interest is fading." "I can't imagine why it is, though." "Mehrdad has done some very good work, but he seems to be becoming less motivated." "Who knows?" "I'd like to know why." "If he had stayed as keen as at the beginning..." "I'd have worked day and night." "It would've been no problem." "Yes?" "Come in." " It's Mr Farazmand." " Excuse me." " How are you?" " Fine, thank you." "I hope I'm not disturbing you." "Not at all." " This is Mr Mohseni." " How do you do?" " Mr Makhmalbaf." " Pleased to meet you." "Please sit down." "How do you do, Mr Ahankhah?" "I hope I'm not interrupting." " Can I have a word?" " Of course." "Can we start the rehearsals?" "I'll be right with you." "Mr Ahankhah, I need a tape recorder." "Mr Farazmand needs a tape recorder." " A portable tape recorder." " We don't have one." " What about your neighbors?" " I'll ask them." "Let him finish his meal." " Don't let them take him away." " Don't worry, he'll be back." "Is this your first offence of this kind?" "Yes, it's the first." " Yet I heard that..." " People take me for Makhmalbaf." " So it's not the first time." " People have taken me for him and I did nothing to correct them." "Do you regret what you did?" "Yes..." "I know that justice must be done." "But I regret having toyed with their feelings." "That's the only reason I'm ashamed." "Deep down, I never had the slightest intention of stealing from them." "I'm sorry for what I did, but not for the time I spent in prison." "Prison is good for good people and bad for the wicked." "It teaches good people a lesson but the wicked get worse." "I repent." " Been to prison before?" " Never." " What is your trade?" " I worked for a printer." "Why did you search every room in their house?" "I was playing the part of a director." "I said that we'd do the shot from such and such an angle..." "Have you ever worked in film?" "No." "But I've read books on the subject." "Screenplays and books about how to direct films." "I went through the motions of rehearsing scenes." "You also asked them to cut the trees in the garden." "I said that for the scenes we'd shoot in the garden, the trees would obscure the view of the house and Mr Ahankhah agreed to cut them down." "Then, I said that we could use other angles." "Was the idea of filming in the house yours or theirs?" "Mine, but they liked the idea, too." "Did you intend to ask them for money for the production?" " To produce the film?" " Yes." "I put forward a project to them." "If I'd had the money, I would have shot it." "They seemed to want to get involved in a film project." "I never thought it would turn out the way it did." "He repents of his faults." "I wish to ask the plaintiffs if they would agree to pardoning him." "Of course, his offence is punishable by law." "But their pardon could be considered as extenuating circumstances." "I would have pardoned him if he had been honest." "But when I hear him, I get the impression he is still acting." "He's still playing a role, even if it's a slightly different one." "Instead of playing Makhmalbaf, he is playing a sentimental person." "I'd like Mr Farazmand to tell us about the various people who contacted him about this man." "Do you have new evidence?" "Yes, I do." "I've been following the case." "What is the title of the article you wrote?" ""Bogus Makhmalbaf Arrested."" "Bogus Makhmalbaf?" "When the paper came out, I received a lot of phone calls." "One of them was from a woman I haven't been able to find since." "She said that a man who claimed to be Makhmalbaf had promised to give her a part in his film." "He had even promised to marry her." "She wanted to file a complaint and I told her she should come to the trial to tell her story." "But she refused." "I also got a call from a printer's saying that the accused had misappropriated funds, such as keeping the money from a delivery of paper." "Well, Mr Sabzian..." "Concerning the lady's phone call..." "Since you're single now, you could've..." "I deny everything and I am prepared to confront her." "I worked as a salesman for a trading company." "I'd call on clients and show them my samples." "The day I met Mrs Ahankhah" "I was short of money and I'd left home without eating any lunch." "When Mrs Ahankhah took me for Makhmalbaf," "I thought that I could perhaps go and have lunch at her house." "I only did it to have a meal." "I would like to add... an important fact." "On the day I was arrested," "I had written Mr Ahankhah's address in my notebook and I wrote next to it" ""The Last Tragedy"." " You knew..." " I sensed it." "I sensed the end was coming and I wrote it down." "My tragic end." "I'm sure they read it at Police HQ." "I knew that I'd be arrested because of the money that I'd received and because I'd spent the night there." "But I couldn't stop myself going back to that house." " Why?" " I loved playing that part." "I enjoyed playing the part of Makhmalbaf and arousing their respect and admiration." "It did my morale a lot of good." "I also thought they'd give me some financial support." "But that day when he came to pick me up on his motorbike," "I felt ill at ease." "But I decided to go with him nevertheless." "As I arrived that last day, I knew I'd be arrested." "When I phoned Mehrdad to fix an appointment with him at Hosseinabad Square, I knew it was a trap." "When Mehrdad arrived at the square, he was astonished to see that I was waiting for him, which confirmed my suspicions." "I made a note of it and they read it at Police HQ." " Where is this notebook?" " I tore out the page." "I tore it out, because I thought it was all over." "When did you realize your pretence had been discovered?" "On the last day." "During the evening I spent with them," "I saw a film magazine lying around." "Inside was a photo of Makhmalbaf." "He was directing one of his actresses in a scene from Marriage of the Blessed." "I sensed that they had bought this film magazine, because there was this photo in it." "They wanted to see how I'd react." "They showed me the photo and said to me, "You were more handsome" ""when you were young, Mr Makhmalbaf"." "I said to them that I was much younger then." "At that moment, I sensed that they were suspicious." "But I soon convinced myself that they didn't know I wasn't Makhmalbaf." "How far did you want to take this?" "As far as they were... prepared to go." "When he came to our house on the Thursday, he had grey hair." "But on the photo, Makhmalbaf's hair was black." "I didn't ask him why, but he said that his hair had once been black and it was now grey." "When he returned that Saturday, he had dyed his hair." "How does he explain that?" "My mother, who is right here, can confirm that I dyed my hair a long time before this whole episode began." "I wanted to look a bit younger." "You are young." "I've been dyeing my hair for a long time, and it wasn't for the reason that was suggested here." " Are you married?" " Yes." " You have a family?" " I'm divorced." "Why is that?" "I was poor and out of work." " Any children?" " Two." " Where are they?" " I have one, my wife the other." " Who looks after him?" " My mother." " Where is your mother?" " Right here." " Where?" " At the back, wearing a black veil." " Are you Mr Sabzian's mother?" " Yes." "Do you know why he divorced his wife?" " Why?" " He works for a printer off and on." "He's often out of work." "Our house is small." "After he married, they got a room of their own." "After seven years, his wife started complaining that there was no future for her in our house." "He said that if she wasn't happy, the best thing would be to divorce." "They agreed she'd keep one child and me the other." "He lives with me." "When he has work, he supports his family as best he can." "He's never been in trouble before." "Why didn't you try to get bail for him?" "I went to see the officer in charge." "I also asked to see Mr Ahankhah." "But they said they'd handle it." "Every time I feel sad in prison," "I think of the verse in the Koran which says," ""To remember God is the best consolation for a troubled heart"." "I feel the need, when I'm depressed or overcome by worries, to express the anguish in my soul, all my sorrows" "that no one wants to hear about." "And then, I come across a good man who portrays all my sufferings in his films, and makes me want to see them over and over again." "A man with the courage to portray people who play with others' lives, the rich who are indifferent to the needs of the poor... simple needs which are mainly material." "That's why this book brought me consolation." "It speaks of things I'd have liked to express myself." "Now, having played this part, do you think you are a better actor than a director?" "It's not for me to say." "I think I prefer being an actor." "I think I could express all the bad experiences I've had and all the suffering I have felt deep down inside me." "I like to think that I could get these feelings across through my acting." "Are you not acting for the camera right now?" "What are you doing now?" "I'm speaking of my suffering." "That's not acting." "I'm speaking from the heart." "For me, art... is the extension of what you feel inside." "Tolstoy said," ""Art is a sentimental experience" ""that the artist develops in himself and shares with others"." "I think that my experiences of hardship and suffering can give me the grounding I need to be a good actor." "That way I act well and I express my inner reality." "Why did you pretend to be a director, rather than become an actor?" "Playing the part of a director is a performance in itself." "T o me, that's acting." " What part would you like to play?" " My own." "You are playing your own part." "Mr Sabzian, you have heard the charges against you." "Say whatever you think might help your case." "I ask Mr Ahankhah's honorable family to forgive me." "I'm not asking to be spared the sentence I deserve." "I need their pardon to soothe my conscience." "I ask the court to forgive me if that is possible." "Do you promise never to do it again?" "I promise." "The accused..." "Please forgive him." "Sit down." "My son is a descendant of the Prophet." "For his sake... please forgive him." "In view of his young age, the fact that he has a family to support, that he has no record, and that he promises never to do it again," "I would ask the plaintiffs to forgive him if they can." "But as I said before, their pardon could only be considered as extenuating circumstances." "Is this the case?" "I am willing to withdraw my complaint in the hope that Mr Sabzian may become a useful member of society." "Now I know he regrets what he did, if my son Mehrdad is in agreement," "I will withdraw my complaint." "His actions are the result of the social malaise and unemployment." "But this is not the place to debate that." "He is therefore not the only one to blame." "Unemployment can lead to delinquency." "I am certain, after he has been freed, if he finds a proper job, he will lead an honest life." "That's why I too withdraw my complaint." "We've lost him!" "He didn't wait in the right spot." "I can't see him." "We can't redo this shot!" " I can see him." " Yes, he's behind the taxi." " I see him." " Me, too." "We've no sound!" "What on earth's going on?" "It comes from Mr Makhmalbaf's lapel mike." "It's old equipment." "There's a loose wire in it." "It's 15 years old." "The sound's back!" "Will it last long?" "We can't do anything." "Are you Mr Sabzian?" "How are you?" "Don't cry." "There's no need to cry." "When were you released?" "Let me look at you." "When were you released?" "Look at me." "Let's go." "This way." "You OK?" " Where are you going?" " The Ahankhahs'." "I'll take you." "Had you seen me before?" " In the film." " Which film?" "Marriage of the Blessed." "Do you prefer being Makhmalbaf or Sabzian?" "I'm tired of being me." "I'll get the motorbike." "Hold that for me." "How long were you in prison?" "When you met that woman in the bus..." "In your opinion..." "That's very true." "Now I see what that means." "Do you want to buy some flowers?" "Count your money." "Be careful with your money." "Here, take this." "Not yellow ones." "Pick a different color." "Red's better." " Yes?" " Hello, it's Mr Sabzian." " Who?" " Sabzian." "Makhmalbaf." " Yes?" " It's Mr Makhmalbaf." " Hello." "Come in." " Hello." "What's the date, Hossein?" "The 3rd." "When did you come here first?" "40 days ago." " Hello." " Hello, how are you?" " You know Mr Sabzian." " Yes, indeed." "Please forgive me, Mr Sabzian." "Mr Sabzian has changed." "Please see him in a new light." "I hope he'll be good now and make us proud of him." "Subtitles by J Miller and S Farsi" "Subtitles edited by Yasmeen Khan"