
YALDA places a condemned young woman at the center of a public ordeal that feels both ancient and alarmingly current. Maryam must face Mona, the dead man's daughter, in a live television show built around confession, tears and audience approval. With the clock running, YALDA turns a private crime into a spectacle where mercy is negotiated in public. Maryam has one hour to save herself after killing her much older husband in a moment of rage. Every question from the hosts, every reaction from the studio and every message from the viewers can shift the balance. The film keeps the confrontation tight and restless, moving between the stage, the off-camera corridors and the silent spaces where emotions harden instead of easing. From this setup, YALDA develops a harsh drama about guilt, revenge, forgiveness and manipulation. The television frame may be modern, yet the forces at work are old: family pressure, a mother's authority, public judgment and the search for a price that can measure a life. Bakhshi uses the format of a thriller to reveal how quickly empathy can become a social test. Against the backdrop of the Persian winter solstice festival, YALDA also points to a society in which tradition, media performance and material calculation collide. The film observes how a woman in black and a frightened accused woman embody opposing ideas of justice, while the surrounding chorus comments, hesitates and judges. YALDA remains a tense, compact chamber drama.
Keywords
- Cine-Short: 90 Minutes of cinema
- Grand Jury Prize Sundance
- Iranian Cinema
- LuxFilmFest
- Lëtzebuerger Filmpräis
- Made with Luxembourg
- Sundance Film Festival !
- middle east
- relationship
- religion
- women
Actors
- Sadaf Asgari
- Behnaz Jafari
- Fereshte Sadre Orafaiy
- Forough Ghajabagli
- Arman Darvish
Director
- Massoud Bakhshi
Drama, Thriller
1h 29min
-12
FARSI
FRENCH
YALDA turns a live TV ritual into a tense drama of guilt and forgiveness, where a young woman fights for life before a watchful live audience.
YALDA turns a live TV ritual into a tense drama of guilt and forgiveness, where a young woman fights for life before a watchful live audience.
YALDA places a condemned young woman at the center of a public ordeal that feels both ancient and alarmingly current. Maryam must face Mona, the dead man's daughter, in a live television show built around confession, tears and audience approval. With the clock running, YALDA turns a private crime into a spectacle where mercy is negotiated in public.
Maryam has one hour to save herself after killing her much older husband in a moment of rage. Every question from the hosts, every reaction from the studio and every message from the viewers can shift the balance. The film keeps the confrontation tight and restless, moving between the stage, the off-camera corridors and the silent spaces where emotions harden instead of easing.
From this setup, YALDA develops a harsh drama about guilt, revenge, forgiveness and manipulation. The television frame may be modern, yet the forces at work are old: family pressure, a mother's authority, public judgment and the search for a price that can measure a life. Bakhshi uses the format of a thriller to reveal how quickly empathy can become a social test.
Against the backdrop of the Persian winter solstice festival, YALDA also points to a society in which tradition, media performance and material calculation collide. The film observes how a woman in black and a frightened accused woman embody opposing ideas of justice, while the surrounding chorus comments, hesitates and judges. YALDA remains a tense, compact chamber drama.
Festivals
Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin
Sundance Film Festival
Berlinale - Generation
Cast & Crew
Director
Massoud Bakhshi
Cast
Sadaf Asgari
Cast
Behnaz Jafari
Cast
Fereshte Sadre Orafaiy
Cast
Forough Ghajabagli
Cast
Arman Darvish