Hoda Taheri (Iran, 1992) is een uit Iran gevluchte kunstenaar en filmmaker die in Berlijn woont. In 2016 behaalde ze haar bachelor in visuele communicatie aan de Limkokwing University in Maleisië. Haar eerste korte film, Mother Prays All Day Long, kreeg een speciale vermelding op het Locarno Festival 2022 en een nominatie bij de Duitse filmprijzen.
Hoda Taheri
Hoda Taheri nam deel aan de poll “Greatest” Short Films of All Time 2025, een unieke publieksbevraging als collectieve liefdesbrief aan de kunst van de korte film. yanco en Kurzfilm Festival Hamburg, in samenwerking met Talking Shorts, nodigden filmmakers, curatoren, distributeurs, critici en academici wereldwijd uit om tien audiovisuele werken van minder dan zestig minuten te nomineren die zij persoonlijk beschouwen als de “beste” aller tijden. Dit was de inzending van Hoda Taheri:
| Movie | Original Title | Director | Country | Year | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex Party | Angelika Levi | Duitsland, Nederland | 1987 | 10’ | ||
“Sex Party” by Angelika Levi is a fascinatingly intimate short film that balances vulnerability and curiosity with a disarming sense of honesty. In just a brief runtime, Levi manages to explore themes of desire, boundaries, and human connection without judgment or sensationalism. The film feels raw yet thoughtfully composed, like an honest conversation that lingers long after it ends. |
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| The House Is Black Khaneh siah ast | Forugh Farrokzhad | Iran | 1963 | 22’ | ||
The House Is Black is a haunting and deeply poetic documentary that transforms the harsh reality of a leper colony into a meditation on beauty, suffering, and humanity. Forough Farrokhzad’s direction blends striking imagery with lyrical narration, creating a film that feels both intimate and transcendent. Rather than exploiting pain, she finds grace within it, revealing the dignity of lives often unseen. In just over twenty minutes, the film captures more truth and compassion than many full-length features. It’s a timeless masterpiece of empathy and visual poetry. |
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| When the Kid was a Kid Bache vaghti bache bud | Anahita Ghazvinizadeh | Iran | 2011 | 17’ | ||
When the Kid Was a Kid is a tender, observant short that captures the quiet struggles of growing up. Ghazvinizadeh’s gentle touch and empathy turn simple moments into heartfelt reflections on identity, gender, and childhood. |
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| Paradiso, XXXI, 108 | Kamal Aljafari | Duitsland | 2022 | 18’ | ||
Paradiso, XXXI, 108 is a compelling short that examines the portrayal of military power through archival Israeli army footage. Kamal Aljafari exposes the tension between staged spectacle and reality, revealing how cinema can shape perception of war. The film is sharp, unsettling, and thought-provoking, questioning the line between documentation and propaganda. |
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| The Anthropophagous Councillor La concejala antropófaga | Pedro Almodóvar | Spanje | 2009 | 8’ | ||
La concejala antropófaga is a darkly playful short that showcases Pedro Almodóvar’s flair for blending humor, horror, and social satire. In just a few minutes, the film delivers a quirky, macabre tale that is both shocking and amusing, elevated by a brilliant performance from its lead actress, whose presence brings depth and charisma to the story. |
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| Those Who Move Quem se move | Stephanie Ricci | Brazilië, Portugal | 2025 | 20’ | ||
Those Who Move follows René, a young Brazilian living in Lisbon, through one intense night of dislocation, longing and decision. Ricci uses the city’s alleys, stairways and queer nightlife as mirrors of René’s internal conflict, torn between staying undocumented in a place that grows ever more alien or returning to the home she once fled. The film is raw, honest and visually precise, capturing the precariousness of migration, the pull of two continents and the desire to belong. |
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| Community Gardens | Vytautas Katkus | Litouwen | 2019 | 15’ | ||
Community Gardens is a quietly powerful short that captures the rhythms of everyday life with subtle observation and empathy. Vytautas Katkus uses simple, intimate visuals to explore human connection, routine, and the small, meaningful moments that shape our communities. The film is both tender and reflective, leaving a lasting impression despite its brief runtime. |
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| La Paresse Portrait of a Lazy Woman | Chantal Akerman | België | 1986 | 14’ | ||
Akerman turns idleness into quiet defiance. With still, witty shots, she transforms laziness into a poetic act of resistance against work and expectation, brief, sharp, and quietly radical. |
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| It’s Raining Frogs Outside Ampangabagat Nin Talakba Ha Likol | Maria Estela Paiso | Filipijnen | 2021 | 14’ | ||
The film’s unusual premise serves as a metaphor for unexpected chaos in everyday life, skillfully capturing both humor and unease. The cinematography is vivid, emphasizing the absurdity of the situation while grounding it in human emotion. Though brief, the narrative leaves a lingering sense of wonder and reflection, making it a memorable piece in the realm of contemporary short films. |
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| Mother Land Terra Mater | Kantarama Gahigiri | Rwanda, Zwitserland | 2023 | 10’ | ||
The film transforms a waste site into a hauntingly poetic meditation on memory, resilience, and humanity’s complex relationship with the land, blending striking visuals, ritualistic movement, and an evocative soundscape to leave a lasting impression. |
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