Misplaced Pages

Captain Khorshid

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1987 Iranian film
Captain Khorshid
Directed byNasser Taghvai
Written byNasser Taghvai
Produced byMohammad Ali Soltanzadeh
StarringDariush Arjmand
Ali Nassirian
Parvaneh Masoumi
Fathali Oveisi
CinematographyMehrdad Fakhimi
Edited byNasser Taghvai
Release date
  • 1987 (1987)
Running time1 hour 49 minutes
CountryIran
LanguagePersian

Captain Khorshid (Persian: ناخدا خورشید, romanizedNakhoda Khorshid) is a 1987 Iranian film written and directed by Nasser Taghvai. It is based on Ernest Hemingway's 1937 novel To Have and Have Not, but it moves the setting from Cuba to the south of Iran and the shores of the Persian Gulf. All the events of the film are nationalized.

It is considered one of the greatest Iranian films by critics.

Plot

Captain Khorshid is a sailor who although only having one hand, manages to sail his little boat. In his village, due to its hot climate and hard living conditions, dangerous criminals are sent into exile. They want to escape from the area, so they ask a middleman to strike a deal with Khorshid. Khorshid is asked to illegally take them out of the country with his boat. At first he is reluctant, but because of the hardships of living he accepts the job.

The criminals murder one of the village's wealthiest merchants and steal the money needed for the trip. At the beginning of the journey the criminals kill the middleman, in the middle of the trip they attack Khorshid and his crewman. The crewman is killed, Khorshid faces them single-handedly. He manages to kill all the criminals, but he himself dies due to the injuries he sustained.

Comparisons with To Have and Have Not

Apart from the shift of location from Cuba to Iran, the main difference lies in the fact that the female character is overshadowed in Taghvai's adaptation and has a smaller role. The Chinese immigrants of the novel are excluded - the four Cubans become Iranian criminals in exile, who are much more evil and uncontrolled.

Harry Morgan is first pictured as a cold-blooded murderer but later we find out that he is a good man, Khorshid has our sympathy from the beginning.

The ending is also different, as Khorshid dies in his boat.

The most important similarity is the fact that Khorshid, similarly to Morgan, is driven to crime by economic worries.

References

  1. Captain Khorshid on Soureh Cinema
  2. Captain Khorshid on Magiran News

External links

Ernest Hemingway
Bibliography
Novels
Nonfiction
Posthumous
Short stories
Short story
collections
Story fragments
Poetry
Plays
Screenplays
Letters and
journalism
Adaptations
The Sun Also Rises
"The Killers"
A Farewell to Arms
To Have and Have Not
For Whom the Bell Tolls
The Old Man and the Sea
Other film adaptations
Homes
Depictions
Related
Family


Stub icon

This article related to an Iranian film is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: