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Drama

The Cyclist

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The wife of Nasim, an Afghan immigrant in Iran, is gravely ill. He needs money to pay for her care, but his day labor digging wells does not pay enough. A friend connects Nasim to a two-bit promoter who sells tickets to watch Nasim ride a bicycle continuously for a week. The promoter brings in sick and aged spectators, haranguing them to find hope in Nasim's strength. Aided by his son, who feeds him as he rides, Nasim grinds out the days and shivering nights. Local officials believe this may be a plot and Nasim may be a spy; they try to sabotage him as do those who bet he won't finish the week. Will desperation alone get Nasim the money? Is any triumph an illusion?

Release Date : 1989-02-01

Language :Persian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Bonyad Mostazafan

Production Country : Iran

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Mahshid Afsharzadeh

Character Name : Gypsy Woman

Original Name : Mahshid Afsharzadeh

Gender : Male

Firouz Kiani

Character Name : Motorcyclist

Original Name : Firouz Kiani

Gender : Male

Samira Makhmalbaf

Character Name :

Original Name : Samira Makhmalbaf

Gender : Female

Mohammadreza Maleki

Character Name : Jomeh

Original Name : Mohammadreza Maleki

Gender : Male

Esmail Soltanian

Character Name : Showman

Original Name : اسماعیل سلطانیان

Gender : Male

Moharram Zaynalzadeh

Character Name : Nasim

Original Name : Moharram Zaynalzadeh

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CRCulver

@CRCulver

2021-06-23

In the aftermath of the Soviet invasion and civil war, hundreds of thousands of Afghans fled across the border with Iran. There they struggled to survive, offering themselves as day labourers at exploitative wages, harassed by officials and just ignored by the bulk of Iranian society. Mohsen Makhmalbaf's 1987 film The Cyclist is an allegory for the Afghan refugee experience, Nasim (Moharram Zaynalzadeh) must pay the hospital stay of his ailing wife and bring up his son Jomeh (Mohammad Reza Maleki), but even backbreaking labour as a well-digger doesn't pay the bills. When a local business learns that Nasim once rode a bicycle for three nonstop, he offers the desperate man the chance to save his family: ride a bicycle for a week in a makeshift circus ring. Makhmalbaf communicates Nasim's lack of humanity by giving him very few lines. Most of the film consists of arguments among the gamblers and local politicians who stand to profit or lose from Nasim's act, as in the background he circles around and around and around. This film would already be heartrending if it were a straight-up tale, but Makhmalbaf makes it even more poignant with a light dusting of magic realism. Though less elegant than some of his later films like Nun va guldoon (released internationally as A Moment of Innocence), this is a memorable film and it's easy to see how it established Makhmalbaf's reputation internationally. Iranian cinema holds many delights, and this is one of its triumphs.