Abused Iranian seeks refuge Down Under

The title character (Zar Amir Ebrahimi, left) and her daughter, Mona (Selena Zahednia), in Shayda

By Richard Ades

Shayda is the story of an Iranian woman who flees a bad marriage by hiding out in a shelter for abused women.

The title character is played by Zar Amir Ebrahimi, who expressively conveys Shayda’s fears as she faces cultural and legal forces that limit her options despite the fact that she and her husband are temporarily living in Australia. Perhaps her greatest fear is that even if she wins a divorce, she could end up losing custody of her daughter.

The story is inspired by the real-life experiences of writer-director Noora Niasari, whose mother went through a similar ordeal. That explains why Shayda’s fears ring true, including her paranoia that husband Hossein will somehow discover the shelter’s secret location.

That also might explain why the character who affects us the most is Shayda’s daughter, Mona, who basically represents Niasari herself. But it certainly helps that Mona is played by a talented young actor named Selena Zahednia, whose face and voice register every emotion the girl is experiencing.

When Shayda and Mona first arrive at the shelter, the daughter is peevish and complains about missing the foods and relatives they’ve left behind in Iran. She even seems to miss her father, though she’s witnessed at least some of his brutish behavior toward her mother.

Then Hossein wins a court order granting him unsupervised visitations with his daughter, and Mona begins undergoing a subtle transformation. At first won over by her dad’s hugs and gifts, she becomes increasingly alarmed by his questions about Shayda’s comings and goings. And she feels uneasy when he asks her to keep confidences from her mother.   

As Hossein, Osamah Sami gives an unnerving portrayal of a man whose fatherly feelings may be subservient to his anger toward his wife and his patriarchal sense of entitlement.  

It’s easy to conclude that Hossein is shaped by his Muslim beliefs and that the movie is an attack on the culture that spawned them. But the flick’s main target is actually wider, as the shelter where Shayda finds refuge also houses women of other nationalities, including the UK. In other words, abuse of women is depicted as a universal problem.

Speaking of universality, the film’s main weakness is that it defines Shayda as an abused wife and devoted mother, but it fails to fill in the details that would help us understand her as an individual.

What is her background? Why is she in Australia? What are her career goals? The answers to such questions are eventually given (or at least hinted at), but in the meantime she simply comes across as a scared woman who’s desperate to change her life.

It’s one more reason why Mona stands out as the film’s most relatable character.

Rating: 3½ stars (out of 5)

Shayda (PG-13) opens April 5 at select theaters.

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Author: Richard Ades

Richard Ades was the arts editor of The Other Paper, a weekly news-and-entertainment publication, from 2008 until it was shut down on Jan. 31, 2013. He also served as TOP's theater critic throughout its 22-year existence.

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