It gets there by means of a sly subterfuge. Though the girl is established as the obvious focal point and point of viewer identification, The White Balloon is really a running commentary on the character of everybody else we see on screen: the unscrupulous traders, the dismissive pet shop owner, the overworked tailor, the thoughtless scooter drivers, the good Samaritan prepared only to go so far. Once again, we bear witness to the great virtue of late 20th century Iranian cinema: simple interactions - and sparse dialogues, in this case between characters who spend a good stretch of the running time sitting on a grille at the side of the road - which click together like mosaic tiles or those opening shots into a gradually all-encompassing picture. As Kiarostami and Panahi saw it in 1995, neither this system not this society is functioning as it should; as a result, even a transaction as notionally simple as buying a goldfish turns into a protracted obstacle course, with no guarantee of the desired outcome at the end of it. The ending to this secular parable is deliberately left open, more mysterious than conventionally happy; that's why it stays with you so. (In its own way, it is a gift as great as any goldfish: something to take home and let swim around inside your head.) On the verge of tears throughout yet driven by a single-minded determination to see her mini-mission through, Mohammedkhani is a picture of constancy, resolve and resilience in what surely has to be one of the all-time great child performances, all the more impressive for seeming to understand and embody ideas altogether greater than her pipsqueak self. By my reckoning, she must now be in her mid-thirties; we can only wonder whether Iranian society is working out any better for her today.
The White Balloon is currently available to stream via YouTube.
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