Two steps forward, one step back is likewise the theme of Manijeh Hekmat's restrained, rewarding Women's Prison, an Iranian feature spanning 17 years. A strict female warden cleans up a jail in the mid-'80s, but she's limited in what she can do for her prisoners by the men above her. Unsurprisingly, the subsequent revolution fails to transform women's lives; as one caustic inmate says in 1992, "These days you're set if you have three things: money, balls, and connections." A decade later, it still holds true.
In Abbas Kiarostami's unrelenting Ten, which assuredly blurs all distinctions between fiction and documentary, a dashboard-mounted camera in a well-off woman's car provides intimate, candid insights into her unhappy status in contemporary Tehran. The most poignant commentary, though, comes from a passenger whose face we never see -- a pragmatic prostitute whose irritated, amused, and hurtful remarks echo those of working girls anywhere.
The contentious and passionate family in the erratic feature All Hell Let Loose has fled Iran for the benign climes of Sweden, but despite their push to assimilate they've yet to fully shake an anachronistic vestige of home -- patriarchy. Even Israelis dream of escaping; in the intriguingly layered first-person doc For My Children, Michal Aviad and her husband debate whether to uproot their not-yet-draft-age children and return to San Francisco, where they spent a happy decade. While Iranian filmmakers campaign for the unfulfilled promise of human rights, Aviad suggests that Israel's leaders have repeatedly betrayed a basic pledge -- that the next generation won't have to make sacrifices of blood and life.
Violence and its repercussions trigger the frustratingly shallow My Terrorist (paired with For My Children), in which Israeli filmmaker Yulie Gerstel locates the still-imprisoned Iraqi who wounded her and killed another El Al stewardess in London in 1978. The Palestinian-Israeli mess also provides the backdrop for Penny Woolcock's reimagining of John Adams' opera The Death of Klinghoffer, as well as one of the fest's most eagerly anticipated titles, the world premiere of Hanna Elias' high-stakes romantic triangle, The Olive Harvest. For those who believe that art is the enemy of oppression, these missives from the Mideast are as welcome as rain.
Our Times: Saturday, April 19, 4:15 p.m., AMC Kabuki; Thursday, April 24, 9:15 p.m., Pacific Film Archive; Sunday, April 27, 3:45 p.m., CinéArts
Iran, Veiled Appearances: Tuesday, April 22, 9 p.m., AMC Kabuki; Saturday, April 26, 11 a.m., AMC Kabuki
Women's Prison: Monday, April 28, 7:15 p.m., AMC Kabuki; Tuesday, April 29, 1 p.m., AMC Kabuki; Thursday, May 1, 7 p.m., Pacific Film Archive
Ten: Saturday, April 19, 7 p.m., AMC Kabuki; Wednesday, April 23, 6:30 p.m., AMC Kabuki
All Hell Let Loose: Sunday, April 20, 9:45 p.m., AMC Kabuki; Sunday, April 27, noon, AMC Kabuki
For My Children/My Terrorist: Saturday, April 26, 4:15 p.m., Pacific Film Archive; Sunday, April 27, 3:15 p.m., AMC Kabuki
The Death of Klinghoffer: Sunday, April 20, 5:30 p.m., Castro; Monday, April 21, 7 p.m., Pacific Film Archive
The Olive Harvest: Friday, April 25, 7:15 p.m., AMC Kabuki; Monday, April 28, 2 p.m., AMC Kabuki