The Salesman

    The Salesman
    2016

    Synopsis

    Forced out of their apartment due to dangerous works on a neighboring building, Emad and Rana move into a new flat in the center of Tehran. An incident linked to the previous tenant will dramatically change the young couple’s life.

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    Cast

    • Shahab HosseiniEmad Etesami
    • Taraneh AlidoostiRana Etesami
    • Babak KarimiBabak
    • Mina SadatiSanam
    • Mehdi KoushkiSiavash
    • Farid Sajjadi HosseiniNaser
    • Maral Bani AdamKati
    • Mojtaba PirzadehMajid
    • Sam ValipourSadra
    • Shirin AghakashiEsmat

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Variety

      For a healthy stretch, The Salesman is even more low-key, minimal, and contained than the earlier Farhadi films. Yet the writer-director’s technique is just as assured as before. Every shot is in place, every line leading to an outcome that feels quietly up for grabs.
    • 83

      The Playlist

      Though it is dense in allusion and rich in texture, there are choices he makes that ultimately pull The Salesman back from the greatness, and the engulfing universality of his best work. It is as compelling as anything Farhadi has ever made, but it’s also somehow smaller.
    • 80

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Lacking the astounding social complexity of his Academy Award winning drama A Separation, here the gears are not so hidden and a sense of contrived drama leads to some tedious sections. But all is forgiven when the final punches are delivered in a knock-out finale that leaves the viewer tense and breathless.
    • 80

      Screen Daily

      Farhadi remains a master of pace and tension, slowly upping the stakes in an unsettling narrative fuelled by a lingering sense of powerlessness, paranoia and the possibility that you never entirely know the person you love.
    • 80

      CineVue

      This is a rich and complex take on guilt and anger.
    • 80

      TheWrap

      Though a vengeance riff, it remains a Farhadi film all through, so dancing around each other means a lot of talking about action instead of doing action. And that’s fine – the former playwright is uncommonly gifted in writing third acts, where each line of dialogue and simple gesture are imbued with meaning.
    • 67

      The Film Stage

      Uncharacteristically inert, the film plods its way to a strained finale that erodes much of the strength of its potentially compelling themes.
    • 67

      Consequence

      Given that The Salesman strives to be far more than a revenge thriller, Emad’s story isn’t enough to make it an unqualified triumph, but it’s still a genuinely good film, and worth watching.

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    • Miljana