The film 'My Favourite Cake' shows the voyage of discovery of an elderly woman in Tehran. Photo: supplied
The directors of an Iranian film - which featured in New Zealand's International Film Festival - have been given suspended jail sentences for allowing a woman to be shown without a headscarf.
Maryam Moghadam and Behtash Sanaeeha were convicted earlier this week by an Iranian Revolutionary Court for the film My Favourite Cake, the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) and Dadban legal monitor said in separate statements on Thursday.
The film, which competed at the 2024 Berlin Film Festival and won prizes in Europe and the United States, shows the voyage of discovery of an elderly woman in Tehran who notably appears in the film without the headscarf that is obligatory for women in Iran.
The pair were sentenced to 14 months in prison, suspended for five years, and a fine on charges of "spreading lies with the intention of disturbing public opinion", Dadban said.
In addition, they were sentenced to one year in prison, also suspended for five years, and all equipment ordered confiscated for the charge of "participating in the production of vulgar content".
Another fine was ordered on the charge of "showing a film without a screening licence", it added.
"Artists in Iran endure significant hardships, including increasing censorship, arbitrary detentions and the constant threat of legal repercussions for expressing dissent through their work," the New York-based Centre for Human Rights in Iran said, commenting on the verdict.
Even before their conviction, Moghadam and Sanaeeha were banned from leaving Iran to attend the Berlin film festival and then promote the film when it was released in Europe.
"We wanted to tell the story of the reality of our lives, which is about those forbidden things like singing, dancing, not wearing hijab at home, which no one does at home," Moghadam told AFP in an interview earlier this year.
News of the verdict came as the Cannes Film Festival announced that the latest movie by another leading director banned from leaving Iran, the prize-winning Jafar Panahi, would be screened at its 2025 edition.
Another recent Iranian film, Mohammad Rasoulof's The Seed of the Sacred Fig, which explicitly deals with the 2022-2023 protest movement, resulted in the director and several of its actors fleeing the country, and those who remained unable to leave and subject to prosecution.
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