10 March 2008
Abbas Kiarostami is the most widely celebrated Iranian cultural figure of the last few decades. A prolific filmmaker, photographer, poet and artist, he creates work that appears simple and direct in terms of narrative while remaining conceptually complex. He is renowned as one of the most consistently innovative and visually imaginative filmmakers in the world, though has recently been experimenting with a more minimalist approach, particularly in the 2002 taxi conversation piece Ten.
Five (2003) was released theatrically by the BFI in May 2005 during a major London-wide festival of Kiarostami's work (Visions of the Artist), which included a complete retrospective and an on-stage Guardian Interview hosted by Geoff Andrew at the NFT (now BFI Southbank), as well as photographic exhibitions, installations and a conference at the V&A. Five continues and extends the radically minimalist approach of Ten, featuring five extended, seemingly single-shot sequences shot by the sea: a piece of driftwood is tossed by the waves; people stroll along a promenade; dogs gather on a beach; ducks cross noisily before the camera; and a pool of water reflecting the moon echoes with the croaking of frogs, a storm and other night sounds.
The sequences are not merely pretty pictures or a documentary record – carefully constructed and manipulated, with a soundtrack meticulously assembled as a symphony of natural noise, they together comprise a kind of abstract narrative arc, moving from solitude to community, motion to rest, near-silence to birdsong.
Ending on a note of regeneration, Five's choreographed action and inaction encourage and enable the viewer to engage with film in an unusually active way. A sublimely serene and contemplative response to the natural world, it gives audiences the opportunity to embrace an unusual yet rewarding cinematic experience.
Five will be released on UK DVD by the BFI on 31st March 2008 at the RRP of £19.99. The 1.33:1 (OAR) transfer and will contain the following extra feature:
- The Making of Five (2005): Abbas Kiarostami's reflections on film and the making of Five (52 mins, Farsi with English subtitles)
The DVD also contains a fully illustrated booklet with contributions from Geoff Andrew and Jonathan Romney.
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