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The Patience Stone

Syngué Sabour - Pierre de patience

  • Status: Released
  • 20-02-2013
  • Runtime: 102 min
  • Score: 7.1
  • Vote count: 108

In a war-ridden country, a woman watches over her husband, comatose from a bullet in the neck and abandoned by Jihad companions and brothers. One day, the woman decides to say things to him she could never have done before.

Golshifteh Farahani

The woman

Hamid Djavadan

The man

Hassina Burgan

The aunt

Massi Mrowat

The young soldier

Mohamed Al Maghraoui

The mullah

Malak Djaham Khazal

The neighbor

Faiz Fazil

Armed man

Hatim Seddiki

Soldier 1

Mouhcine Malzi

Soldier 2

Amine Ennaji

Soldier 3

Hiba Lharrak

Eldest daughter

Aya Abida

Youngest daughter

Fatima Mastouri

Old woman

Sabah Benseddik

Prostitute

Ahmed Ait Mahrabi

Man in armchair

CinemaSerf

In a war-torn Muslim nation (that we can presume is Afghanistan) we are introduced to a young woman (Golshifteh Farahani) who is trying to look after her two young daughters whilst their father is lying lifeless on a mattress with a bullet hole in his neck. His colleagues have long deserted them and so she must try - with the help of a nearby aunt (Hassina Burgan) - to keep her family safe whilst nursing her husband as best she can. There are militia everywhere and with him paralysed on the floor, she has to find ingenious ways to try and hide him from their murderous hands. As the days pass, she begins to talk to the man (and us) and that provides for much of the fairly traumatic backstory that sees her exposed to brutality, indifference and negligence since childhood. She also has an encounter with the local commander whom she convinces she is an whore. He is disgusted but seems to have mentioned this to his men as a nervous young man (Massi Mrowat) appears on the doorstep ostensibly just looking to pay for sex but actually he is in need of a great deal more. Vulnerabilities are rife amidst the chaos of war. Gradually, her memories become more descriptive, more explicit and by the conclusion we know much more about her than perhaps she had realised. Is he listening, though? It's most unusual to have an incapacitated man, on death's door, serving as a conduit for a story like this but it works effectively. She tells us a story riddled with persecution - physically and intellectually and once she has opened the floodgates, her resentment pours out. It's not a rant, there's not really that much rancour. It is a measured and rational evaluation of her life and of her treatment by those she loved and who were supposed to care for her in return. It invites us to critique the austerity of her faith, and of her sex's role within that framework, without telling us exactly what to think. Any judgements here are ours. It can get a little repetitive at times but Faharani exudes a sense of intensity that does make this quite a poignant watch.

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