

Rangan 99
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Tiyam Yabandeh Jahroumi's Rangan 99 (2015) is a quietly devastating anti-war short that achieves in fourteen wordless minutes what many feature-length films fail to accomplish in two hours: a profound meditation on the shared humanity of enemies. Set during the brutal Iran-Iraq War, the film strips away language, ideology, and national identity to focus on two soldiers from opposing armies who find themselves in an unexpected moment of connection. Jahroumi's decision to work without dialogue is not merely a stylistic choice but a philosophical one—by removing the rhetoric that fuels conflict, he forces the audience to see these men as individuals rather than symbols of opposing nations. Hossein Ershadi and Mostafa Malek Makan deliver performances of remarkable physical restraint, communicating fear, exhaustion, and tentative recognition through gestures and glances rather than speeches. The film's visual approach is spare and unadorned, with Aean Irani's cinematography favoring tight close-ups and desaturated landscapes that emphasize the psychological toll of war over battlefield spectacle. Jahroumi, who also served as costume designer, grounds the period detail in authenticity without allowing it to distract from the emotional core. The pacing is deliberate, building tension through silence and stillness before releasing it in small, human moments—a shared cigarette, a cautious gesture of aid—that resonate with disproportionate power. What distinguishes Rangan 99 from other war shorts is its refusal to romanticize either soldier or to offer easy moral resolution; neither man is hero or villain, and their encounter changes nothing about the larger conflict while changing everything about how we perceive it. The festival recognition Rangan 99 garnered—including Best Film at Religion Today, the Grand Prize at Arvand, and the Spirit of Faith Grand Prize at Fresco—speaks to its universal resonance across cultural and religious boundaries. Its nomination at Palm Springs ShortFest further confirms its ability to bridge borders through pure cinematic storytelling. In an era of increasingly polarized global politics, Jahroumi's debut feels more urgent than ever: a reminder that the artificial divisions we construct to justify violence dissolve the moment we look another person in the eye. At just fifteen minutes, Rangan 99 is a masterclass in economy and empathy, proof that the most powerful anti-war statement is often the simplest one.
