Kandahar is a 2001 Iranian film directed by
Mohsen Makhmalbaf, set in
Afghanistan during the rule of the
Taliban. Its original Persian title is
Safar-e Ghandehar, which means "Journey to Kandahar", and it is alternatively known as
The Sun Behind the Moon. The film is based on a partly true, partly fictionalized story of a successful Afghan-Canadian, played by
Nelofer Pazira, who returns to Afghanistan after receiving a letter from her sister, who was left behind when the family escaped, that she plans on committing suicide on the last
solar eclipse of the millennium.
Kandahar was filmed mostly in Iran, including at the
Niatak refugee camp,Mario Falsetto, Liza Béar.
The Making of Alternative Cinema: Beyond the frame : dialogues with world filmmakers. Praeger, 2008. ISBN 0275999416, 9780275999414. but also secretly in Afghanistan itself. Most people, including Nelofer Pazira, played themselves. The film premiered at the
2001 Cannes Film Festival, but didn't get much attention at first. After
9/11, however, it was widely shown.
Kandahar won Makhmalbaf the
Federico Fellini Prize from
UNESCO in 2001.
Plot
Hidden behind a
burqa, Nafas, the sister from Canada, makes her way across the border with a family of
refugees. When they are robbed by brigands and the family turns back, she decides to continue on her way, accompanied first by a young boy who was just expelled from a
Qur'anic...
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