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November 7, 2009
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Home > Movies > Reviews > 2009 |  
The Stoning of Soraya M.
| posted 6/26/2009




The Stoning of Soraya M.

Our rating: 3 Stars - Good

Your rating:  

MPAA rating: R
(for a disturbing sequence of cruel and brutal violence, and brief strong language)

Genre: Drama

Theater release:
June 26, 2009
by Roadside Attractions

Directed by: Cyrus Nowrasteh

Runtime: 1 hour 56 minutes

Cast: Mozhan Marno (Soraya), Shohreh Aghdashloo (Zahra), Navid Negahban (Ali), Ali Pourtash (Mullah), David Diaan (Ebrahim), Parviz Sayyad (Hashem), James Caviezel (Freidoune)

Related: Talk About It/Family Corner


What do you do in the face of injustice toward another? Do you immediately look away, not wanting to see or hear because it's too uncomfortable? Do you observe the injustice, silently thank God it's not impacting you, then proceed as usual? Do you speak out against the wrongdoing? Do you fight the injustice lawfully? Unlawfully?

This is a question nearly all the main characters in The Stoning of Soraya M. have to grapple with at some point in the film. How they respond is at turns unthinkable, disappointing, relatable, and inspiring.

The Stoning exists thanks to the response of one person in this inspired-by-true-events story, a man who happened into this disturbing scenario quite by mistake. In the late 1980s, French-Iranian journalist Freidoune Sahebjam (James Caviezel) got stranded in a remote Iranian village when his car broke down. While waiting for repairs, he was approached by Zahra (Shohreh Aghdashloo), a local woman insistent on telling him a story about a recent local conspiracy.

James Caviezel as Freidoune
James Caviezel as Freidoune

"Voices of women do not matter here," Zahra explained, "I want you to take my voice with you." (Which he eventually did via the 1990 international bestselling book The Stoning of Soraya M., upon which this movie is based.)

Skeptical, Freidoune got out his tape recorder, pressed play, and listened as Zahra shared about her niece Soraya (Mozhan Marno). Soraya was married for 20 years to an abusive man, Ali (Navid Negahban), who wanted out of their marriage so he could wed a 14-year-old girl. If he requested a divorce for such reasons, Ali would have to pay support to his wife and two daughters (he planned to take their two sons with him). But, if he found another way out of the marriage, he would be free to do as he pleased without the financial burden. So Ali falsely accused Soraya of having an affair with Hashem (Parviz Sayyad), the local widower she'd been caring for.

But Ali could not ensure her guilty verdict alone. He needed help from the local religious leader, the Mullah (Ali Pourtash), who helped maintain Islamic Law. He needed the mayor, Ebrahim (David Diaan), to be willing to hear the case. And he needed the widower to substantiate the false accusations. How Ali wielded power with each man and how they responded and even participated in this injustice is frustrating and sobering.

But not as frustrating and sobering as the fact that many women in that culture had (and still have) absolutely no power—not even over their own fate. Under Islamic law if a man accuses his wife, she must prove her innocence. If she accuses her husband, she must prove his guilt. "It's a man's world," Ali instructed his sons, further turning them against their own mother.

Shohreh Aghdashloo as Zahra
Shohreh Aghdashloo as Zahra

At times Ali is portrayed so unsympathetically he almost seems like a caricature. He most assuredly is an evil man, but the danger is prompting Western minds that already find these events difficult to fathom to wonder if perhaps parts of the story are ramped up for emotional manipulation. Though it could be argued that if even a fraction of this story is true, it's still disturbing. And that the realities of Islamic law and other documented cases of death by stoning (mentioned in the film's closing credits) provide that fraction of truth. 

Soraya's case was quickly tried behind closed doors with only the town's men in attendance. She was found guilty of adultery, a crime punishable by stoning. And a punishment we're then shown in staggering, gruesome detail. The scene is difficult—and yet important—to watch, because our discomfort is intermingled with the film's only redemption: knowing.

The title gives away the film's ending, but it's the journey there that's the real point—especially as it illustrates the oppressive realities under more extreme forms of Islamic law. In some Muslim regions, women are routinely treated cruelly, are often denied a voice and true justice, and are frequently victims of inhumane punishment. During a time when humane treatment of criminals is being discussed throughout the US, when stoning is still a means of punishment in places throughout the world, when women are still subject to such injustice (sex trafficking, domestic abuse, female genital mutilation, etc.), The Stoning is timely and relevant.



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[Reader Reviews]
Average User Rating: 

b. fuchs   Posted: July 07, 2009 5:24 PM
Outstanding acting and storyline. Most enjoyable and informative of the culture. I just hope stoning is no longer acceptable and women are really gaining their freedom.

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