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Now Playing
Contemporary World Cinema: "The Glass House"
Introduced by director Hamid Rahmanian and writer/producer Melissa Hibbard
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Directed by Hamid Rahmanian
USA/Iran, 2009
Color
92 Minutes
English/Farsi with English subtitles
Show Times:
Mon., Nov. 2 7:00 PM
The fringes of Iranian society can be a lonely place, especially if you are a teenage girl with few resources to fall back on. The Glass House follows four girls striving to pull themselves out of the margins by attending Omid-e-Mehr, a one-of-kind rehabilitation center in uptown Tehran. Forget about the Iran that you´ve seen before. With a virtually invisible camera, the girls of The Glass House take us on a never-before-seen tour of the underclass of Iran with their brave and defiant stories: Samira struggles to overcome forced drug addiction; Mitra harnesses abandonment into her creative writing; Sussan teeters on a dangerous ledge after years of sexual abuse; and Nazila burgeons out of her hatred with her blazing rap music. This groundbreaking documentary reflects a side of Iran few have access to or paid attention to: a society lost to its traditions with nothing meaningful to replace them and a group of courageous women working to instill a sense of empowerment and hope into the minds and lives of otherwise discarded teenage girls.
This film is part of the Contemporary World Cinema film series.
Presented in association with the Omid Foundation and the Iranian Cultural Foundation-Houston
Hamid Rahmanian is a filmmaker and graphic designer. He holds a B.F.A. from the University of Tehran in Graphic Design and earned a M.F.A. in Computer Animation in 1997 from Pratt Institute in New York City. He received "The First Place College Award" (a student Emmy) from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and was nominated for a Student Academy Award for his animation, The Seventh Day, among other awards in 1997. His first 35mm film, a 19-minute experimental short, An I Within, received Kodak´s "Best Cinematography Award" and "Best American Short" from the Los Angeles International Short Film Festival. Mr. Rahmanian then went on to make three documentaries on video: Breaking Bread (2000), Sir Alfred of Charles de Gaulle Airport (2001) and Shahrbanoo (2002), all of which have been well received by the media and worldwide audiences. In 2003, Mr. Rahmanian co-founded and was the president (2003-2007) of ARTEEAST, an organization committed to promoting the arts and cultures of the Middle East in the US and abroad. In 2005 he completed his first feature-length film entitled Day Break, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and was the recipient of several prestigious awards. He completed the feature-length documentary The Glass House in the fall of 2008 that premiered at IDFA and Sundance Film Festival. It was the winner of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe´s Human Rights Award.
Melissa Hibbard is a photographer and filmmaker. She earned her BA in Moving Image Arts in 1996 from the College of Santa Fe where she studied documentary filmmaking. Upon graduation, she moved to Los Angeles and worked in the film industry as an art director on feature films for five years. Her photographs have been exhibited in the US and abroad over the past six years. She produced four documentaries on video: Breaking Bread (2000), which premiered on PBS and Sir Alfred of Charles de Gaulle Airport (2001). Both have been well-received by the media and worldwide audiences. Shahrbanoo (2002) premiered on PBS where it received among the highest ratings for an independently produced documentary. The Glass House (2008), produced in association with Sundance Channel, premiered at International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in November 2008 and Sundance Film Festival in 2009. In 2003, she co-established a non-profit organization — ARTEEAST - its mission statement to promote the arts and cultures of the Middle East and its worldwide diasporas in the United States; she was a board member and the ARTEEAST Online Director through 2007.
Click here to visit the film´s Web site.

Be sure to check back for additional screenings or changes in the Films schedule. You can also contact us with questions about future films at film@mfah.org.
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