A really engaging early film from Farhadi. Many of the themes he's become known for of course make an appearance here, namely those of family, mistrust, home, neighbours, honour, divorce, children trapped between fighting parents, modernity v tradition, rich and liberal v modest and conservative. Unlike the Salesman (2016) though and the Past (2013) there is a fair bit of humour here though mainly coming from our sweet natured cheerful protagonist and her unworldly ways. As a young working-class girl with an idealistic view of her coming marriage to her finance she finds herself in for a shock when she meets the highly strung neurotic rich lady she's to clean for. Her dysfunctional marriage becomes the centre of the plot, though we explore this world through our protagonist innocent eyes. Is the lady paranoid in her fears about her husband or is she right to worry? Fireworks and firecrackers are present throughout unnervingly snapping and exploding throughout the long tense day.
The real strength of the director is unpacking information slowly to keep the audience hocked, withholding things to keep us intrigued, every single shot in this film somehow holds your attention, he takes the mundane and packs it full of detail,. The cinematography also gives it a cool, subdued look with a slightly sickly colour, very pasty but perfect for its tone. The score isn't that noticeable which is how I think a drama film like this should be. The acting is so strong you quickly forget it's happening. Another superb strength is how the characters are feel like real fleshed out people struggling with their personal troubles, their actions all feel real and never contrived, nobody is perfect as they say. I could watch this again and again. The Iranian language and culture also give it an exotic foreign touch.