Berlinale 2023: Two films relive torture in Iranian prisons
The Hindu
‘Where God is Not’ and ‘My Worst Enemy’, directed by Mehran Tamadon, attempt to document the torture of political prisoners in Iran
In Where God is Not, Iranian filmmaker Mehran Tamadon’s unflinching account of the torture of former political prisoners in Iran, the director asks his interviewees to relive the horrors of their incarceration.
The film — which opened at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 18, 2023 as part of a Tamadon double-bill exploring abuse in Iranian prisons — spotlights torture practices the director says intensified following the revolution of 1979 and continue today.
“It’s happening right now,” Tamadon told Reuters. “I’m sure that tonight somebody is being tortured in that way.”
Shot in an abandoned warehouse in Paris, where Tamadon lives, the film features interviews with three ex-prisoners in reconstructed cells and interrogation chambers made from wood.
One interviewee, who says he ran a video equipment rental company in Iran before competitors with government ties accused him of spying, describes how electric cables were wrapped around his feet, lacerating his skin, and assumes the excruciating “bundle” position, lying face down with his hands cuffed to his folded legs.
Another former inmate recounted with tears how a small yet sadistic tormenter named “Mr. Punisher” beat her and other female prisoners. The journalist Taghi Rahmani, who has been imprisoned multiple times, reveals how he maintained sanity while kept in a tiny cell.
The film, which forms part of an Iran focus at this year’s Berlinale, aims to confront prison guards in Iran with their own cruelty, Tamadon said.