Surviving Paradiseراز بهشت | |
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Directed by | Kamshad Kooshan |
Written by | Kamshad Kooshan |
Produced by | Kamshad Kooshan Bahman Maghsoudlou |
Starring | Shohreh Aghdashloo Kian Abedini Lauren Parissa Abedini Joe Alvarez |
Cinematography | Paul Mayne |
Edited by | Rick LeCompte |
Music by | Richard Herrera Lopez |
Distributed by | New Light Entertainment LLC (US) |
Release date |
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Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Surviving Paradise is a 2000 American family adventure/drama film written and directed by Kamshad Kooshan. With three months of theatrical release in major theaters in Southern California and the San Francisco Bay Area, it is considered to be the first English-language Iranian-American film distributed in the United States. [1] It is one of the first to prominently feature Shohreh Aghdashloo in a Hollywood production.
The story concerns the struggles of a newly-arrived Iranian brother and sister in the rough as well as better-off neighborhoods of Los Angeles.
When the 10-year-old boy Sam and his younger sister Sara arrived in Los Angeles with their mother, the only thing on their mind was to go to Disneyland. But things take a wrong turn when their mother is kidnapped by three armed members of the mafia. Realizing that the police can't find their uncle, their only relative in town at the time, these two helpless children take on the vast and unforgiving streets of Los Angeles to find him themselves. On their way they encounter a colorful cast of characters and frightening situations where their humanity and endurance are tested.
Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called the film "well-intended but awkward". [2] Mick LaSalle also panned Surviving Paradise in the San Francisco Chronicle, describing the film as exemplifying the worst aspects of both American and Iranian cinema, and calling it a "low-budget mess", "poorly made", "aimless", and "overly sentimental". [3] In the LA Weekly , Professor of Cinematic Arts Holly Willis called it "laughable", writing that it "proffers an astonishing array of cultural clichés in a flat-footed story". [4]
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