TEHRAN, 21 October 2005 — Iran’s Islamic regime has slapped a ban on foreign films deemed to be “feminist,” “secular” or pro-American, with hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also pushing his vision of a Qur’anic society.
A ruling by the Supreme Cultural Revolution Council, a watchdog headed by Ahmadinejad, bans “the distribution and screening of foreign films which promote secular, feminist, liberal or nihilist ideas and degrade oriental culture.” Also forbidden are movies that feature “violence, narcotics consumption and propaganda for the world oppression,” a term reserved for arch-enemy the United States, the Shargh newspaper said yesterday.
The report said the directive has been widely circulated, especially within the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance and state television and radio.
“The Iranian people have a mission to create, on this sacred Iranian ground, an ideal society founded on the Qur’an,” Ahmadinejad was also quoted as telling a local gathering titled “Servants of the Qur’an.”
He promised his government, less than three months into its four-year mandate, would “advance with strength to favor the spread of a Qur’anic culture.”
Under Ahmadinejad’s reformist predecessor Mohammad Khatami — a mild-mannered cleric and a lover of all things cultural — Iran had partially opened its doors to certain Western films.
More and more Western films have been shown, albeit with certain scenes censored.
Several Hollywood films are currently being shown in Iranian cinemas, including “Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow,” “The Others” and “The Aviator.” It is unclear if the new regulations will result in them being pulled.
Conservative-controlled state television has also broadcast more Western movies — partly because millions of Iranians have been switching to the use of banned satellite television equipment.
A string of police crackdowns have failed to stop the spread of satellite television, and the regime has resorted to the use of jamming equipment that especially targets broadcasts by opposition-run stations based in the US.