Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Men At Work (Kargaran mashghoole karand)

Kargaran mashg­hoole karand (Men At Work) (Director: Mani Haghighi, Iran, 2006): Kargaran mashg­hoole karand (Men At Work) begins with four middle-aged men driving home to catch an important foot­ball match on tele­vi­sion. Three of them are talking and joking around while the other naps. He wakes up and bugs them until they finally pull over and allow him to make a pit-stop on the side of the road on the edge of a canyon. While they are stopped, they dis­cover a tall, narrow rock form­a­tion sticking out of the ground. This film is about their attempts at trying to figure out how it got there, but ulti­mately how to knock it down.

It doesn’t sound like a very intriguing story, but somehow it is. And funny. The situ­ation these men impose upon them­selves can surely be a meta­phor for any kind of obstacle that one may face in life, or it could really just be about how dif­fi­cult it is to dis­lodge a big rock from the earth.

Through altern­ating moments of silence, comedic and almost slap-stick antics, emo­tional out­bursts and acts of des­per­a­tion, we learn of these mens’ rela­tion­ships with women (two of whom con­veni­ently show up, join the chal­lenge for a while, and then leave) and each other, but mainly we see how dif­fer­ently they each deal with this “problem.”

Men At Work (Kargaran mashghoole karand)

I have seen a few Iranian films from the past few years, and most of them are about women and their struggles within their cul­ture. This film, how­ever, may focus on the pos­sibly neg­lected point of view of the men, and per­haps this is why the offensive rock is quite, well, phallic. Is this a com­mentary on the dif­ferent atti­tudes that some Iranian men may have about their male-dominated society? If so, then how does one explain the rel­at­ively passive atti­tudes of the women who show up? (One can make a meta­phor of any­thing, I suppose.)

In the end, after periods of working together and then lit­er­ally giving up and leaving someone behind, the four friends learn that some­times prob­lems can solve themselves.

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