DramaWar

Lakposhtha parvaz mikonand

2005
8 / 10
Near the Iraqi-Turkish border on the eve of an American invasion, refugee children, like 13-year-old Kak (Ebrahim), gauge and await their fate.
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
scene
Sometimes when I experience a film that is working, I am amazed at all the chance events that occurred to bring it to my soul. Film is a collaborative endeavor, so right at the start you need the various chance meetings that bring a team together, plus all th...
Among the hundred reasons I could list for you to go see this film, the first is the main character Kak "Satellite." He is truly a unique character - the likes of which I've never seen before. It is pretty impressive for a filmmaker to create something new - a...
Turtles Can Fly takes place in a world of hellish bleakness, a land that seems post-apocalyptic with its barren expanses, its piles of rusted military machinery, its barbed-wire and tents. It's a world that has suffered wars before - the wreckage of them is ev...
It would be hard to imagine a more pertinent and relevant film than "Turtles Can Fly," an Iran/Iraq co-production that, like a modern day version of "Forbidden Games," looks at the horrors of war through the eyes of its most helpless and innocent victims - chi...
The trauma of war has been an issue much covered in cinema, but in this film, we are shown the impact that it has on those who are most innocent of all – the children. The orphaned children are a range of interesting characters presented to us here, from Satel...
Trailer
Lakposhtha parvaz mikonand Official Trailer
YouTube