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Half Moon: Again With the Kurdish Neorealism

Published 7:00 am Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Kurds carry the burden of history.
Kurds carry the burden of history.

Bahman Ghobadi, Dogpatch fabulist and dean of Iranian Kurdish cinema, leads another magical mystery tour through his mountainous homeland—populated, per usual, by a small army of cute urchins, irascible wives, and garrulously self-important old goats. One of the latter, a renowned Kurdish musician named Mamo, visits a village where 1,334 women singers have been exiled and attempts to smuggle one into Iraq for a concert with him and his 10 sons. The music is, as always, terrific; the overall ethno-funkiness brings Ghobadi (A Time for Drunken Horses, Turtles Can Fly) within hailing distance of such folk-cinema maestros as Alexandr Dovzhenko and Sergei Parajanov. J. HOBERMAN