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A group of unique directors and the essential works that you've got to see.

||| Joss Whedon |||
Joss Whedon

For never giving up on a project, for his undying determination to tell his stories.

For his feature film directorial debut, he continued his canceled TV show, and it's one of the best sci-fi movies ever made. And he did it all with a low budget, no major stars, and filmed locally in LA.

The best show ever, bar none. This is the last season, and one of the very best. Don't knock it until you watch it.

Yes, this is Joss! Oscar-nominated for his screenplay, this flick has his trademark wit, humor, and emotion.

Recommended by CassyHavens

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Turtles Can Fly

By BrianOrndorf

March 30th, 2005

A compelling and heartbreaking look at hardened children in the center of the American invasion of Iraq, “Turtles Can Fly” is a wildly eye-opening experience. Blessed with a cast of top-notch acting amateurs, “Turtles” isn’t not an easy film to watch, but its profound horrors serve a much greater purpose than simple shock value.


In the village of Iraqi Kurdistan, on the border between Iran and Turkey, orphaned children lead very adult lives as they try to survive the looming days before the U.S. invasion of Iraq is set to begin. The leader of these children is Satellite (Soran Ebrahim), a kind of cable repairman figure for the local villages. As he travels around installing dishes and antennae, a young, silent girl catches his eye. The mysterious girl (Avaz Latif), wandering the countryside with her armless, seemingly clairvoyant brother (Hirsch Feyssal) and a toddler, has a death wish and doesn’t respond to Satellite’s advances. As doom approaches this fragile region of the world, Satellite gets lost in his own daily struggles, unaware of the tragedy that lies before him.

The third feature from director Bahman Ghobadi (“A Time for Drunken Horses”) is a bit of a miracle all around. One of the only Iran-Iraq co-productions in today’s marketplace, “Turtles Can Fly” tells a very distinctive story about life and society in the middle of a media flashflood. The picture is reminiscent of the 1997 Iranian film “Children of Heaven” and Danny Boyle’s recent “Millions” in its depiction of a child’s point of view to the story, yet never infantilizing the situations at hand; the characters are thrust into the adult world by tragedy, and they cannot turn back. To survive, they must compete with those adults around them. In the case of Satellite, he builds his own community of orphans (in a somewhat Artful Dodger role) to carry out his deeds, which including harrowing sequences where the children are set off to collect land mines (the limbless ones with their teeth), or empty a truck filled with thousands of spent artillery casings which form a macabre maze of gloom.

The objective of “Turtles” is to get away from the distancing media saturation surrounding Iraq and capture the emotional atmosphere of the citizens, who only get the occasional taste of traditional news outlets. Through confusion, rumor, and panic, these people live the Iraqi invasion, not just witness it from afar. The young, amateur cast sells this mood of despair and survival brilliantly, and Ghobadi pulls out terrifically heartbreaking performances from everyone. The actors create a taut sense of community and claustrophobia, which “Turtles” needs urgently when the film intermittently gets loftier, abstract ambitions to tell its story. Ghobadi wisely keeps politics out of the mix too, using George Bush and Saddam Hussein as a visual backdrop to the tale, moving way beyond the figurehead look at the country.

“Turtles” is ultimately a bleak, disturbing film. Yet, it’s a portrait that provides a needed break from the rising tide of suffocating media. It reminds us all that between the headlines, there is a human element that is often forgotten. “Turtles Can Fly” is a powerful reminder of just what is lost when world leaders decide to go to war.

My rating: B+