Hezar Dastan
Hezar Dastan is a 1987 popular and critically acclaimed epic historical drama television series in Iran, developed and directed by Ali Hatami. Hezar Dastan is considered one of the most important and most influential works of art in the history of Iranian Broadcasting. The show's story, characters, acting, atmosphere and music were highly acclaimed by critics and fellow directors of the time, and the influence of the show's themes and story can be seen in Iranian Pop Culture as well as many works of art coming in later years.
The production of the show took almost 8 years, starting in 1979 and ending in 1987, during which Hatami established a large set to represent Tehran in both Qajar dynasty and World War II, retroactively creating Iran's first movie studio and backlot. The show was the ground for many controversies in terms of censorship and changes in the story. In 2006, Hezar Dastan was voted by the Association of Iranian movies and TV critics as the best Iranian TV series ever made.
Plot
The story is split into two different timelines. The events of World War II and Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran is where the main narrative takes place, but a great deal of the story is told through flashbacks to the last days of Qajar dynasty by Reza Khoshnevis.Qazarian jewelry shop is robbed by Moffatesh Shesh Angoshti during an official census by the government, following a direct order by Reza Shah Pahlavi. As a result of this robbery, a set of jewelry that belonged to Khan-e-Mozaffar's daughter-in-law, Amineh Aghdas went missing. Khan -e- Mozaffar, a mysterious aristocrat who used to be the governor of Kerman when Ahmad Shah Qajar was in power but has taken full-time residence in The Grand Hotel in Laleh-Zar Street of Tehran, asks the Head of Shahrbani to locate the missing jewels. So the Head of Shahrbani assigns Moffatesh to find the set of jewelry.
Moffatesh searches his cache of stolen jewels, but realizes the missing jewels are not among them. So he suspects that the jewels must be among the ones that are sold to an unnamed Princess. Moffatesh then conspires to have Shaban Ostekhani interrupt the premiere of Lor Girl so that he can steal the jewels from The Princess in the chaos. But after showing them to Amineh Aghdas it is revealed that the jewels that were taken from The Princess are not the right ones. So after yet another unsuccessful attempt, Moffatesh realizes that a Police Officer stole the set in the process of the robbery. He pressures the officer and retrieves the jewels for Khan -e- Mozaffar. Khan -e- Mozaffar, pleased with Moffatesh's loyalty and services, assigns him a task to get some highly sought-after calligraphy collection from a calligrapher in Mashhad.
Moffatesh, eager to please the men of power, travels to Mashhad and finds Reza Khoshnevis. As per request of Khan -e- Mozaffar, Moffatesh then starts interrogating and torturing Reza Khoshnevis, until he breaks his will and he agrees to hand over his possessions to Moffatesh, but before doing so decides to tell Moffatesh a little about his personal history.
During the ruling of Ahmad Shah Qajar, Reza Khoshnevis, was employed by many aristocrats to accompany them during their hunting trips and lived a life of luxury but without any purpose. Until one day Reza's world is shaken due to a meeting with Abolfath, a bookbinder in the Grand Bazaar of Tehran that starts a political discussion with Reza about his life and the hardship of common man under the rule of corrupt politicians and aristocracy. Reza, feeling a sense of obligation to his fellow men, then joins with Abolfath's secret organization to act as a hired gun. His first target was Esmaeel Khan, the man in charge of Tehran's granary and from the perspective of Abolfath, the man responsible for famine among commoners.
After the assassination of Esmaeel Khan, Reza is tasked to kill another man: Matin -o- Saltane, the editor-in-chief of a conservative newspaper who was condemned by Komiteh Mojazat for publishing what they deemed as "untrue" or "treacherous to Iranian way of life". During this time, a government official by the name of Baqer Mirza is tasked to investigate the death of Esmaeel Khan. So the members of Komiteh Mojazat hire Shaban Ostekhani, then a notoriously violent homeless man whose job was to collect animal bones from eateries and make animal glue out of them, to keep an eye out for Baqer Mirza. Despite Baqer Mirza's threat, the assassination of Matin -o- Saltane goes underway successfully. Though Komiteh Mojazat later realizes the threat of Baqer Mirza more clearly, and so Shaban decapitates him as a message to government officials.
At this time, Abolfath and Reza were preparing for the assassination of what they deemed to be their biggest target and the most corrupt and powerful man in Iranian government. A man that Komiteh Mojazat gave the code-name of "Hezardastan" to. But Abolfath tells Reza that Hezardastan is paying off the members of committee, and is slowly buying them off. Fearing for their own lives, Abolfath sends his wife and children to Tabriz and advises Reza to leave for Mashhad. Reza at first refuses, but after he's chased by Shaban under the orders of Hezardastan he finally leaves Tehran. In Mashhad, Reza takes refuge in the home of an old aristocrat by the name of Jalal ol-Molk and marries his daughter, Qamar. He then retires his gun and starts to earn his living as a calligrapher, peacefully living outside of political landscape of Tehran and not knowing what happened to Hezardastan or Abolfath.
Moved by his story, Moffatesh reveals his true intentions behind interrogating Reza, but Reza refuses to go back to his home and asks Moffatesh to take him to Tehran to finish his mission and be able to locate and kill Hezardastan. After arriving in Tehran, Reza is taken to The Grand Hotel and given a room next to Khan -e- Mozaffar. In there Reza sells him his handwritten collection and begins to work as a ghost writer for Khan -e- Mozaffar, writing his memoirs. During this time the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran is happening and people are constantly rioting against the government and in one of this riots Shaban uses the opportunity to ransack several stores, including one belonging to an iron-smith by the name of Seyyed Morteza. Realizing the threat of Shaban, Khan -e- Mozaffar orders Moffatesh to kill Shaban. Moffatesh, still feeling loyalty toward Khan -e- Mozaffar, plans some government opium on Shaban and kills him.
Meanwhile Reza, while writing the memoirs of Khan -e- Mozaffar, slowly realizes that he is in fact Hezardastan; and that he is more powerful than he appears to be. Reza also learns that Abolfath was killed in prison by his then cellmate, Shaban. Reza tries to inform Moffatesh of this news, but Moffatesh tells him that he knew of Khan -e- Mozaffar's influence in everyday lives of Iranian people and he sees no way out of his employment. Moffatesh then is killed in his wedding day by Qolam Amme, Shaban's nephew who in return got hanged for the murder of a police officer. Reza, once again shaken by the events and the apparent uselessness of common man in the face of powers behind the curtain, decides to leave Tehran, but his attempt is stopped by Khan -e- Mozaffar and he is informed that he cannot leave town until the memoirs are fully written. Reza, feeling helpless, decides to assassinate Khan -e- Mozaffar and finish his mission of eliminating Hezardastan. But his decision is discovered and he is poisoned by the Head Waiter of Grand Hotel before his attempt.
Weakened by the poison, Reza takes his gun and goes into Khan -e- Mozaffar's room to assassinate him; but instead is faced with the Head Waiter in Khan -e- Mozaffar's bed. Confused and barely standing, Reza goes to the balcony and then is pushed out by the Head Waiter. As people gather around Reza's corpse, Seyyed Morteza sees Khan -e- Mozaffar on the balcony looking down at the people and Reza. A voice over concludes the story, telling that Seyyed Morteza killed Khan -e- Mozaffar in the near future.
Partial Cast
- Jamshid Mashayekhi as Reza Khoshnevis :
- Ezzatolah Entezami as Khan -e- Mozaffar :
- Davoud Rashidi as Moffatesh Shesh Angoshti :
- Ali Nassirian as Abolfath the Bookbinder:
- Mohammad-Ali Keshavarz as Shaban Ostadkhani :
- Jahangir Forouhar as Baqer Mirza:
- Hosein Gil as Seyyed Morteza, an iron-smith in Tehran who later kills Khan -e- Mozaffar
- Jafar Vali as Head of Shahrbani, who is loyal to Khan -e- Mozaffar
- Zahra Hatami as Amineh Aghdas, Khan -e- Mozaffar's daughter-in-law
- *Leila Hatami portrays her as a young girl
- Shahla Mir Bakhtiar as Qamar Banoo, Reza Khoshnevis's wife
- Mansoor Vala Magham as the Grand Hotel's Manager
- Parvis Poorhosseini as Matin -o- Saltane, editor-in-chief of "Asr -e- Jadid" newspaper
- Mohamad Motie as Qolam Amme, Shaban's nephew
- Jamshid Layegh as Jafar Gholi Khan Neshat, a government agent during the census
- Esmaeel Mehrabi as Nasrollah Khorami, a government agent during the census
- Rogheyeh Chehreh-Azad as Qodsi, Khan -e- Mozaffar's maid
- Mino Abrishami as Jeiran, Abolfath's wife
- Ataollah Zahed as Seyyed Ebrahim Rohani, a rohani
- Esmail Mohammadi as Ostad Bahar, music teacher
- Nematollah Gorji as Police Officer
- Mohammad Varshouchi as Police Officer
- Soroosh Khalili as Qazarian, an Armenian jeweler during World War II
- *Soroosh Khalili also portrays the small role of Saqadar in Reza Khoshnevis's memories of old Tehran.
- Hooshang Beheshti as Jalal ol-Molk, an aristocrat in Mashhad and Reza Khoshnevis's father-in-law
- Esmaeel Payandeh as Esmaeel Khan, an aristocrat in charge of Tehran's granary
- Mohammad Taqi Kahnamuei as Mirza Hoda, a Dervish
- Jahangir Almasi as Doctor Feiz, an educated man of arts who has recently returned from abroad
- Saeed Amirsoleimani as Moeer ol-Doleh, an aristocrat in Tehran and the employer of Reza Khoshnevis before Komiteh Mojazat
- Asghar Hemmat as Hassan, a soldier of Iranian Army during Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran
- Manouchehr Azari as the Grand Hotel's Doorman
- Akbar Doodkar as The Pharmacist
- Mahmoud Basiri as Dry Cleaner
- Afsar Asadi as The Princess
- Mehri Vadadian as Esmaeel Khan's Wife
- Farhang Mehrparvar as Dr. Khandan
Controversies