Bread and Roses | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sahra Mani |
Produced by |
|
Cinematography | Abdul Sami Murtaza |
Edited by | Hayedeh Safiyari |
Music by | Masoud Sekhavat Doust |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Apple TV+ |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Bread and Roses is a 2023 American documentary film about women in Afghanistan and the role of the Taliban. It was directed and produced by Sahra Mani. It was co-produced by Jennifer Lawrence and Justine Ciarrocchi for their company Excellent Cadaver after Lawrence saw news coverage of the 2021 Taliban offensive as U.S. troops withdrew. The documentary features footage from Sharifa, an ex-government employee forced indoors, Zahra, a woman organizing activists in her dentistry practice, and Taranom, who seeks refuge in Pakistan. It debuted at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival to critical acclaim, and is scheduled to be released in select theaters on November 22, 2024 before an Apple TV+ platform release.
The documentary shows the effects of the 2021 Taliban offensive that ended two decades of the War in Afghanistan. As American occupation ended and the Taliban gained further control, women lost the rights to education past sixth grade, work, and walking unaccompanied in public. [1] [2]
It follows three women. Sharifa, formerly a government employee, is reduced to a tedious life indoors. Zahra, a dentist made to stop working, begins organizing activists in her former practice; she is arrested and tortured. Taranom is exiled for her activism and becomes a Pakistani refugee. [3] [4] The documentary shows safe houses for women fleeing to Pakistan. [4] Women protest the closing of schools, chanting for "work, bread and education", [3] and water cannons and tear gas are used against them. [4] [5] In one piece of footage, a Taliban fighter threatens to kill a woman who has been arrested for continuing to speak. [6] Female elementary and middle school students are seen chanting anti-Taliban messages. [7]
The documentary ends inconclusively, as the conflict had not ended. [2]
The film was produced by Jennifer Lawrence and Justine Ciarrocchi under their company Excellent Cadaver, which they founded in 2018. [1] [6] Lawrence said that she felt "helpless and frustrated" upon seeing the news in Afghanistan and contemporaneous overturning of abortion rights in the U.S. She wanted the stories to get "into people's psyches" and "help people be galvanized", [8] as American news was "constantly moving" and "distilled through our western lens". [5] Lawrence said that U.S. democracy was "sliding back" despite being what separated the U.S. from countries like Afghanistan. [8]
The director and producer Sahra Mani was hired after Lawrence and Ciarrocchi watched her documentary about an Afghan woman who was sexually abused, A Thousand Girls Like Me (2019). [9] [6] Mani, who worked under the Kabul production company Afghan Doc House, had to shelve a documentary Kabul Melody about a co-educational music school after it was destroyed by the Taliban. [10]
Before Lawrence and Ciarrocchi contacted her, Mani had already begun gathering footage of women's lives under the Taliban. [6] [2] Most footage in the documentary came from three women who feature in it, with one additional cameraperson. [1] The women captured footage on phones and cameras for a year. [2] The production determined that it was unsafe for film crews or Mani to enter the country. [1] Mani had left Kabul under a month before it fell to the Taliban, not knowing she would not return; the three main subjects had all left Afghanistan by 2023. [1] [2] While protesters in Afghanistan were kidnapped and killed, Mani said the film is sanitized, limited to showing protesters being attacked with water cannons. [5]
After a month of collaboration, a 12-minute sizzle reel was composed to pitch to financiers. It was funded by Farhad Khosravi. [2] Postproduction took place in Iran. The film was edited by Hayedeh Safiyari. [2] It became the third production by Excellent Cadaver, which Ciarrocchi said "came out of necessity" rather than a mission to produce documentaries. [2] [10]
Bread and Roses premiered at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival on May 21, 2023. [1] [4] Mani announced at the screening that the "soft message" from women in Afghanistan was for viewers to "please be their voice". [11] The activist Zahra Mohammadi, featured in the documentary, told the audience: "do not forget about Afghan women!" [4] Apple Original Films acquired global rights to the film, with Malala Yousafzai's Extracurricular as executive producer. [12] Yousafzai believed western citizens must "hold their leaders to account" on what their government was doing to protect women's rights in Afghanistan. [5] It was originally scheduled to be released on Apple TV+ on June 21, 2024 before it was postponed. [12] It is now scheduled to be released in select theaters in Los Angeles, New York City, and other cities on November 22, 2024. [13] [14]
Variety 's Catherine Bray praised it as a "necessary howl of rage", saying that it was "urgent and timely" and that its "scrappy, up-close and personal" style benefits from the lack of narrator or viewer stand-in role. [7] Lovia Gyarkye of The Hollywood Reporter described the documentary as "an unparalleled look at Kabul" and "a blueprint for Afghanistan's next generation in their fight for self-determination". Gyarkye said it was "harrowing" as it "intimately documents life for women in Afghanistan" with a "clear-eyed honesty and a compassionate eye". Gyarkye contrasted it with In Her Hands , a documentary about the young politician Zarifa Ghafari with a "thriller-esque narrative", in comparison to which Bread and Roses has "a more honest register". [3]
Lynne Ramsay is a Scottish film director, writer, producer, and cinematographer, best known for the feature films Ratcatcher (1999), Morvern Callar (2002), We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011), and You Were Never Really Here (2017). As of 2024, Ramsay is working on numerous feature films that have yet to be released.
At Five in the Afternoon is a 2003 film by Iranian writer-director Samira Makhmalbaf. It tells the story of an ambitious young woman trying to gain an education in Afghanistan after the 2001 defeat of the Taliban. The title comes from a Federico García Lorca poem and is a tale of flourishing against the odds. It was the first film from Afghanistan following the fall of the Taliban.
Nilofar Pazira is an Afghan-Canadian director, actress, journalist and author.
Jeffrey Leib Nettler Zimbalist is an American filmmaker. He has been Academy Award shortlisted, has won a Peabody, a DuPont, 5 Emmy Awards with 17 Emmy nominations. He is the owner of film and television production company All Rise Films.
Kabul Express is a 2006 Indian Hindi-language adventure thriller film written and directed by documentary filmmaker Kabir Khan and produced by Aditya Chopra under Yash Raj Films. It was released on 15 December 2006. The film stars John Abraham, Arshad Warsi, Salman Shahid, Hanif Humgaam and Linda Arsenio. Kabul Express is the first fictional film for director Kabir Khan who has made several documentaries over the years in Afghanistan. According to him, Kabul Express is loosely based on his and his friend Rajan Kapoor's experiences in post-Taliban Afghanistan. Kabul Express was shot entirely in Afghanistan.
TOLO is a commercial television station operated by MOBY Group in Afghanistan. Launched in 2004, it became one of the first commercial stations in the country and laid the foundation for an accessible media outlet by offring a large library of shows. It is one of the most popular television channels in Afghanistan and broadcasts shows in both Dari-Persian and Pashto
Cinema was introduced to Afghanistan at the beginning of the 20th century. Political troubles, such as the 1973 Afghan coup d'état and the Saur Revolution slowed the industry over the years; however, numerous Pashto and Dari films have been made both inside and outside Afghanistan throughout the 20th century. The cinema of Afghanistan entered a new phase in 2001, but has failed to recover to its popular pre-war status.
Jennifer Shrader Lawrence is an American actress and producer. Lawrence is known for starring in both action film franchises and independent dramas, and her films have grossed over $6 billion worldwide. The world's highest-paid actress in 2015 and 2016, she appeared in Time's 100 most influential people in the world list in 2013 and the Forbes Celebrity 100 list from 2013 to 2016.
Malala Yousafzai is a Pakistani female education activist, film and television producer, and the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize laureate at the age of 17. She is the youngest Nobel Prize laureate in history, the second Pakistani and the only Pashtun to receive a Nobel Prize. Yousafzai is a human rights advocate for the education of women and children in her native homeland, Swat, where the Pakistani Taliban had at times banned girls from attending school. Her advocacy has grown into an international movement, and according to former Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, she has become Pakistan's "most prominent citizen."
The Boxing Girls of Kabul is a 2012 Canadian documentary film directed by Ariel Nasr. The film follows young women boxers, under which Sadaf Rahimi, and their coach Sabir Sharifi at Afghanistan’s female boxing academy, as these athletes face harassment and threats in their efforts to represent their country in international competition and attempt to qualify for the 2012 Olympic Games.
He Named Me Malala is a 2015 American documentary film directed by Davis Guggenheim. The film presents the young Pakistani female activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai, who has spoken out for the rights of girls, especially the right to education, since she was very young. The film also recounts how she survived and has become even more eloquent in her quest after being hunted down and shot by a Taliban gunman as part of the organization's violent opposition to girls' education in the Swat Valley in Pakistan. The title refers to the Afghani folk hero Malalai of Maiwand, after whom her father named her.
Excellent Cadaver is an American film and television production company founded by actress Jennifer Lawrence in 2018. The company has produced the drama Causeway (2022) and the comedy No Hard Feelings (2023), both starring Lawrence.
Hyperobject Industries is an American film and television production company founded by director, producer, screenwriter, and comedian Adam McKay in October 2019.
Mortaza Behboudi is a Franco-Afghan war reporter and documentary filmmaker. In 2019, he was featured in Forbes 30 under 30 in the category of Media and Marketing for his work on Guiti News. Mortaza Behboudi is Bayeux Calvados-Normandy War Correspondents Prize and Prix Varenne winner in the year 2022. On January the 7th, 2023, Behboudi was detained and imprisoned by the Taliban in Afghanistan, from where he had been reporting for a variety of international media since the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan in 2021. He was released from his detention after 284 days on the 18th of October, 2023.
Midnight Traveler is a 2019 documentary film directed by Hassan Fazili. Filmed on three smartphones by Fazili and his wife, Fatima Hussaini, and their two daughters, it chronicles their three-year journey from their home in Afghanistan to Europe in search for asylum.
Retrograde is a 2022 American documentary film directed by Matthew Heineman that covers events that took place during the final nine months of America's 20-year war in Afghanistan. It had its U.S. premiere at the Telluride Film Festival on September 3, 2022, and had its Canadian debut at the Vancouver International Film Festival on October 2, 2022. It was released in select theaters in the United States starting November 11, 2022, by National Geographic Documentary Films and Picturehouse and was later made available on various streaming platforms.
Transition is a 2023 documentary film directed by journalists Jordan Bryon and Monica Villamizar. The film follows Bryon, who documents the lives of Taliban members in Afghanistan after their takeover of the country, while simultaneously undergoing gender transition as a trans man. The film garnered acclaim from critics, though some critics disliked its portrayal of Afghan society.
Die, My Love is an upcoming American dark comedy horror film directed by Lynne Ramsay and co-written by Enda Walsh. It is an adaptation of the 2017 novel by Ariana Harwicz about a new mother in the French countryside who develops postpartum depression and enters psychosis. The film stars Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson, with the former producing through her production company Excellent Cadaver. It is Ramsay's first film since You Were Never Really Here (2017) and fifth feature overall.
Nayera Kohistani is an Afghan women's rights activist. She lived through the first Taliban rule in her country. She was a protestor when they came to power again. She left the country in 2022 after being imprisoned and she is a prominent protestor against the "gender apartheid" and criminalisation of gender in Afghanistan.