Alireza Zarrin has been a Producer in some movies:
Bashu, the Little Stranger is about that At the height of the Iran-Iraq war, Bahram Beizai made Bashu: the Little Stranger. Beizai's film tells the story of young Bashu, who, displaced from his home in Khuzestan thanks to an Iraqi bombardment, seeks refuge in northern Iran. Bashu speaks Arabic while the villagers of northern Iran speak Gilaki. Thus Bashu fails to communicate with the people and is alienated from his new environment. He undergoes
... a further displacement when he hallucinates and sees his mother, who was killed in the bombardment but who wanders as an apparition through the fields of northern Iran. Past and present collide in this powerful story about childhood and war. The magnificent Susan Taslimi plays Naii, a middle-aged mother of two who takes Bashu in when her fellow villagers, by and large, reject him on the basis of his ethnicity. Filmed at the height of the war in 1985, the film experienced delays in its release, for the authorities found its message on the war to be, at best, ambiguous. At a time when cinema was recruited into the war effort, the authorities called for simple answers to complex questions: Does Beizai condemn the Iraqi invaders? Or does he condemn war in general terms as the total failure of the human spirit? Audiences found their own answers when the film was released in 1989. Synopsis by IMVBox In this film Alireza Zarrin collaborates with Sousan Taslimi, Farrokh Lagha Hooshmand, Bahram Beyzai, Iraj Raminfar, Jahangir Mirshekari, Adnan Afravian, Parviz Pour Hosseini, Behrouz Moavenian, Akbar Doodkar, Reza Hushmand, Mohammad Farkhah, Moazez Bani Dokht, Azizollah Salmani, Asghar Shahverdi, Farhang Moayyeri, Firooz Malekzadeh, Shahaboddin Adel.
Close Up is about that The true story of Hossain Sabzian, a cinephile who impersonated the director Mohsen Makhmalbaf to convince a family they would star in his so-called new film. In this film Alireza Zarrin collaborates with Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Jahangir Mirshekari, Alireza Zarrindast, Abbas Kiarostami, Ahmad Asgari, Mohammad Haghighi, Farima Zand-Pour, Hossein Sabzian, Abolfazl Ahankhah, Mehrdad Ahankhah, Mahrokh Ahankhah, Nayer Mohseni Zonoozi, Ahmad Reza Moayed Mohseni, Hossein Farazmand, Hooshang Shamaei, Mohammad Ali Barrati, Davood Goodzarzi, Haj Ali Reza Ahmadi, Hassan Komaili, Davood Mohabbat.
Life and Nothing More... is about that After the earthquake of Guilan, the film director and his son, Puya, travel to the devastated area to search for the actors of the movie the director made there a few years ago, Khane-ye Doust Kodjast? (1987). In their search, they found how people who had lost everything in the earthquake still have hope and try to live life to the fullest. In this film Alireza Zarrin collaborates with Homayoun Payvar, Abbas Kiarostami, Changiz Sayyad, Farhad Kheradmand, Pooya Payvar, Farkhondeh Feyzi, Hassan Zahidi, Antonio Vivaldi, Moharram Feizi.
Where Is the Friend's Home? is about that As he prepares to do his homework, Ahmed realizes that he accidentally brought home a notebook belonging to one of his classmates. Knowing that his friend may be expelled if he does not have the notebook in order to complete his homework, Ahmed goes looking for his classmate. In this film Alireza Zarrin collaborates with Jahangir Mirshekari, Farhad Saba, Abbas Kiarostami, Behrouz Moavenian, Changiz Sayyad, Asghar Shahverdi, Hassan Zahedi, Kheda Barech Defai, Hassan Zahidi, Babak Ahmad Poor, Ahad Ahmad Poor, Iran Outari, Ait Ansari, Sadika Taohidi, Biman Mouafi, Ali Djamali, Aziz Babai, Nader Ghoulami, Akbar Mouradi, Tayebe Soleimani, Mohammad Reza Parvaneh, Rafia Difai, Reza Nami, Amine Allah Hessine.
The Key is about that A young boy is locked into his apartment when his mother goes out and must care for his baby brother and cope with various domestic catastrophes while his grandmother and a neighbor try to locate his mother or the key to the apartment. In this film Alireza Zarrin collaborates with Mohammad Aladpoush, Abbas Kiarostami, Mahnaz Ansarian, Ebrahim Forouzesh, Ahmad Asgari, Nezamoddin Kiaie, Abbas Jafari, Emad Taheri.
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