[Infowarrior] - Tehran shows LOTR to distract population
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Fri Jun 26 03:13:21 UTC 2009
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2009/06/24/tehran_seven/print.html
Tehran dispatch: The regime shows us movies
They want to keep us indoors, and quiet. But which subversive
programmer picked "The Lord of the Rings"?
By Anonymous
Editor's note: For reasons of personal safety, the author chooses to
remain anonymous.
Jun. 24, 2009 |
(For Neda.)
In Tehran, state television's Channel Two is putting on a "Lord of the
Rings" marathon, part of a bigger push to keep us busy. Movie mad and
immunized from international copyright laws, Iranians are normally
treated to one or two Hollywood or European movie nights a week. Now
it's two or three films a day. The message is "Don't Worry, Be Happy."
Let's watch, forget about what's happened, never mind. Stop dwelling
in the past. Look ahead.
Frodo: "I wish the ring had never come to me. I wish that none of this
had happened."
Gandalf: "So do all who live to see such times, but that is not for
them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that
is given us."
On the news, it's more of the same. The state-run media is trying to
tell us that life needs to go on, that politics is a nasty business,
but now it's over. Except for that first night, the news broadcasts
have not shied away from the violence outside. Instead they've found a
way to turn it inside out, make it about the protesters and not the
curious mathematics of the election. At least nothing is hidden or
subtle. When they want to make a point they lay it on, 10 minutes at a
time, sometimes close to 15. It's like a friend says -- this is not
news, it's interpretation, spin.
They interview regular folk on the street and in the parks. They want
viewers to know that all those millions of protesters are, somehow,
not regular folk: "Khastekonande." It's getting old. "Kasebam.
Barayenke moafaq basham bayad moid e am dashte bashe." I'm a
businessman. For my business to succeed, I need for there to be calm.
"Ma faghat mikhaim ye nooni darbiarim, dombal e kar e zendegi berim."
We just wanna make some bread, take care of our lives and our
business. "In ha kay shooloogh mikonand mardoom nistand. Man fekr
nemikonam kay mardoom hastand." The ones who are rioting aren't of the
people. I don't think that they're part of the people. "Chand rooze ke
natoonestam pesar va dokhtaram biaram park bekhatere in shoolooghia."
It's been several days that I haven't been able to bring my son and
daughter to the park, because of the violence.
Back to "Lord of the Rings." Gandalf the Gray returns to the
Fellowship as Gandalf the White. He casts a blinding white light, and
his face is hidden behind a halo. "Imam zaman e?!" someone in the room
asks. Is it the Mahdi, the last imam and, according to Shia Islam, the
savior of mankind?
Who picked this film? I start to suspect that there is a subversive
soul manning the controls at Seda va Sima, AKA the Islamic Republic of
Iran Broadcasting. It is way too easy to play with the film, to draw
comparisons to what is happening in real life. There are the overt
Mousavi themes: the unwanted quest and the risking of life in pursuit
of an unanticipated destiny. Then there is the sly nod to Ahmadinejad.
Iranian films are dubbed (forget the wretched dubbing into English in
the U.S.; in Iran dubbing is a craft) and there are plenty of
references to "kootoole," little person, the Farsi word used in the
movie for hobbit and dwarf. "Kootoole," of course, was, is, the term
used in many of the chants out on the street against President
Ahmadinejad. He is the "little person." ("And whose side are you on?"
Pippin asks the ancient, forest-dwelling giant named Treebeard. Those
watching might think the answer is Mousavi, since Treebeard is decked
out in green.)
The 9-year-old in the room loudly predicts that the "Lord of the
Rings" marathon will put an end to the nightly shouts of "Allah Akbar"
from Tehran's rooftops. People will not take to the roofs and windows
because these films will keep them occupied. Besides, there is a
dubious rumor going around that the basij are marking the doorways of
those households that continue to call out "Allah Akbar!" at night, a
kind of reverse Passover. Fear, as well as Tolkien, will no doubt play
a part.
The 9-year-old goes on to report that the kids on his school
"service" (no Blue Bird buses in Tehran, but long Toyota vans instead)
have been chanting, "Pas rai e ma koojast?! Pas rai e ma koojast?! Pas
rai e ma koojast?!" Then where is our vote?! Then where is our vote?!
Then where is our vote?! I ask him what the driver is doing while all
this goes on and he tells me that the driver honks along. Honk honk-
honk-honk! "Pas rai e ma koojast?!" Honk honk-honk-honk!
Back to the movie. Gandalf's white steed strides into the frame. It is
instantly transformed by local viewers into Rostam's mythical horse,
Rakhsh. Rostam, the great dragon-slaying champion of Ferdowsi's poetic
epic "Shahnameh," which recounts the whole history of Iran.
The 9-year-old is wrong about the rooftops. The sound begins as a low
roll from a nearby park then quickly builds upward. "Allah Akbar!
Allah Akbar!" No way. We rush to the window. It begins at 10 at night
and will continue for another 30 minutes ...
On the television screen, Boromir, human of Aragon, falls. He dies an
honorable death defending the lives of his compatriots.
"In edame dare." This is to be continued. The phrase has become our
hesitant slogan, our phrase of reassurance. "In edame dare." People
are not going to let up so easily.
Each time I've lost faith, I've been wrong. Iranians are proving to be
a sturdier lot than I have given them credit, much mightier even than
the formidable kootooloos that stand in their way.
-- By Anonymous
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