Hedieh tehrani
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Thirteen Cats on the Hot Gabled Roof
2004 Iranian film
Thirteen Cats on the Hot Gabled Roof (2004), also known as Sizdah gorbe roye shirvani, is a Persian film directed by Ali Abdolali Zadeh.[2] It was written by Ali Abdolali Zadeh, Farzaneh Shabani, and Majid Farazmand, and produced by Yousef Samadzadeh. The film won the 22nd Fajr International Film Festival (FIFF) Award.[3][4]
Synopsis
On a planet called Samurai, an important King makes a pact with the Devil. In return for his fertility, the King gives the Devil permission to choose a husband for his first-born daughter. When the King's daughter grows up, the Devil chooses a weak man as her husband. The King, along with all his daughters, is then cursed to become a cat, except for his youngest, Oudeka. In a quest for power and with a desire to reclaim her kingdom, Oudeka flees to Earth, escaping from the Devil. Several years later, Oudeka sends an agent named Ramu to planet Samurai to find her oldest sister and her fiancé to defeat their enemy.[3]
Awards
The fil
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Most societies are conservative to one extent or another, which is to say they have laws and customs, ethics and expectations that shape behavior and relationships among its citizens and members in public and private. Laws and customs establish and maintain principles and priorities; but they can be in conflict with the fundamental personal impulses or even developing social hopes of particular groups in society. Some societies resist change more than others—and the nature and force of the resistance determines how conservative a society is; and often religious societies, like tribal societies, or societies organized around hereditary wealth, are among the most conservative. Societies that affirm citizen rights, democracy, and opportunity may be more liberal, more likely to change: liberal societies are organized around personal freedom and political rights as well as regulatory or restrictive laws, and they respect logic, science, and progress as well as proven traditions. Societies that resist change can encourage a great deal of deception and hypocrisy—as citizens may fee
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