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An exiled actress stars in a piercing portrait of Iran

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Ninety-nine lashes and a prison sentence awaited Zar Amir Ebrahimi in 2008 when she decided to flee Iran. Ebrahimi鈥檚 only crime was sex.
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FILE - Zar Amir Ebrahimi, winner of best actress for her role in "Holy Spider" holds her award following a ceremony at the 75th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, on May 28, 2022. Ebrahimi stars in Ali Abbasi鈥檚 鈥淗oly Spider,鈥 playing a journalist investigating a serial killer in the eastern Iranian city of Mashhad who is murdering women and sex workers. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP, File)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Ninety-nine lashes and a prison sentence awaited Zar Amir Ebrahimi in 2008 when she decided to flee Iran.

Ebrahimi鈥檚 only crime was sex. A videotape made privately with her then-partner had two years earlier been leaked by someone else, and spread widely. Ebrahimi, then a well-known TV star in Iran, was charged with having sexual relations outside wedlock. She was ostracized and harassed, her friends and coworkers interrogated.

鈥淚 lost my career. I lost my whole life. And at some point, I became traumatized. I was scared to go to the street alone,鈥 Ebrahimi said in a recent interview. 鈥淭he authorities did everything to me to just make me more helpless and make me more scared. I think at some point, they wanted me to get to suicide, just somehow remove myself from that society.鈥

Ebrahimi, now 41, decided she wouldn鈥檛 take any more punishment. She fled to Paris, slowly remaking her life and adjusting to a foreign culture. She started with babysitting and restaurant jobs. She hasn鈥檛 returned to Iran since.

鈥淚 can never see myself getting these lashes,鈥 Ebrahimi says.

Now, 16 years later, Ebrahimi has dramatically resurfaced on the global stage. She stars in Ali Abbasi鈥檚 playing a journalist investigating a serial killer who is murdering women and sex workers in the eastern Iranian city of Mashhad. At the Cannes Film Festival, for her performance.

The Iranian regime had tried to silence her, Ebrahimi said. 鈥淎nd yet here I am.鈥

鈥淗oly Spider,鈥 which opens in theaters Friday, is based on , who after confessing to the crimes was celebrated as a folk hero by extremists and right-wing Iranian media. A dark and complex portrait of an Iranian society of oppressive misogyny and simmering injustice, 鈥淗oly Spider鈥 has taken on new meaning following .

Nationwide antigovernment protests were sparked by while in the custody of Iran鈥檚 morality police. Demonstrations have been met by a crackdown by security forces that have killed more than 200 people, including children, according to rights groups. In cities around the world,

鈥淏eing here at this distance, watching all the videos come out, it鈥檚 so hard. I need to participate somehow,鈥 Ebrahimi said by Zoom from Paris. 鈥淚 think with this movie, I have a chance.鈥

Abbasi, who made and has directed episodes of the HBO series 鈥淭he Last of Us,鈥 is also an Iranian exile. He lives in Copenhagen. (鈥淗oly Spider鈥 is Denmark鈥檚 Oscar submission this year.) Politics, he said, never especially interested him as a filmmaker. But he was troubled by the response to Hanaei鈥檚 murders 鈥 dubbed the 鈥渟pider killings鈥 by local media 鈥 and saw in the religious center of Mashhad the shadowy stuff of film noir. There, he says, is the duality of Iranian society, with men make pilgrimages by day and hunt for drugs and prostitutes by night.

Abbasi initially tried to make the film in Iran but couldn鈥檛 secure permission. He shot it instead in Jordan. By then, Ebrahimi had regained a foothold in the European film industry, working in various capacities. She was initially Abbasi's casting director. Only once the original Iranian actress, fearing the regime's response, bowed out of the film did Abbasi ask Ebrahimi to play the part. He knew the role would resonate differently with Ebrahimi.

鈥淚f there is one person I can say with good conscience is an ambassador of Iranian women, an ambassador of the plight and the trouble, and who rose from the ashes, I think that person is Zar,鈥 says Abbasi. 鈥淭here are bigger forces in play than that she鈥檚 just an excellent actor.鈥

鈥淗oly Spider,鈥 which Abbasi has called 鈥渢he first Persian noir,鈥 doesn鈥檛 shy away from the violence of its story. Critics have compared it to David Fincher鈥檚 鈥淶odiac,鈥 an inspiration to the director. One victim is strangled by her hijab. Part of Iran鈥檚 government-mandated dress code for women, the hijab has become a potent political symbol following the death of Amini, who was arrested for violating hijab rules.

鈥淥ne of the regime-friendly journalists asked me in Cannes: 鈥榃hy is it that I insist on showing everything so pitch black?鈥欌 says Abbasi. 鈥淚f you look at what鈥檚 going on in the street right now in Iran, I don鈥檛 think this is a pitch-black rendition of Iran. Maybe it鈥檚 almost too optimistic because, in our movie, nobody is smashing anybody鈥檚 skull with a baton.鈥

Ebrahimi鈥檚 character in the film, Rahimi, is fictional. But as a woman seeking justice for women in a male-controlled, sexually repressed society, she鈥檚 a courageous protagonist who has come to reflect both the current uprising and Ebrahimi鈥檚 own journey.

鈥淚t was really fictional," says Ebrahimi, who became a French citizen in 2017. "But now, the truth is, I just watched these women and these men fighting for their lives and their freedom in the street, it鈥檚 just like there are thousands of Rahimis right now. Rahimi has become a reality.鈥

For Ebrahimi, 鈥淗oly Spider鈥 represents the culmination of a long journey.

鈥淚 channeled my own experience of life in this character,鈥 says Ebrahimi. 鈥淚 never saw myself as a victim but at some point, I think we are all victims of this system, of this mindset.鈥

鈥淧eople don鈥檛 want this system anymore," she adds. 鈥淎s a person who grew up in this system, I think we are almost 18 million actors because we just learn how to lie and live a double life. At some point, I think today, we are just tired of this lie and this game.鈥

鈥淗oly Spider鈥 arriving in theaters during such political upheaval has catapulted both Ebrahimi and Abbasi into roles they never expected and yet at the same time have prepared for their entire lives. At the London Film Festival earlier this month, Ebrahimi said they each felt absurd attending such an event while protesters clashed with authorities. On the red carpet, Abbasi wore a cleric's robe and blood-stained vampire teeth while holding up a sign for Amini.

鈥淚 was sitting there crying: 鈥業 can鈥檛 anymore talk about this. I don鈥檛 know what to say, if I鈥檓 Iranian or not. I鈥檓 not a speaker of these people,鈥" says Ebrahimi. "But I think we need to stay all together. This movie gives me this opportunity and I have to use it.鈥

What's happening in Iran is a revolution, she says, and 鈥淗oly Spider" bears a message: "You can鈥檛 anymore control us.鈥

鈥淭here鈥檚 no way back,鈥 says Ebrahimi.

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

Jake Coyle, The Associated Press

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