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The film revolves around the relationship between a young couple who meets by chance in a café. A successful photographer, Firouz (Shahab Hosseini) is trying to forget his broken marriage while blithely wandering across the city. He meets Ehsan (Leila Hatami), an artist who has just arrived in Tehran on her first trip abroad. The two are drawn together through their mutual loneliness and Ehsan's interest in photography. Ehsan gets more than she bargained for when she falls for Firouz, while he never makes any promises of love or commitment. As their relationship develops, they grow closer to each other while learning about themselves just as people do in real life. "Hum Kaun Hain" was shot on location in Iran. A first feature-length film by first-time director Hansal Mehta, the movie premiered at the Berlin Film Festival on 3 February 2006. The film has won four National Film Awards, including the best film award, and was nominated for 15 other awards. It won four awards at the 2006 Gandhinagar International Film Festival in Gujarat, India, including best first feature film. It was chosen as one of Top Ten Films of 2006 by "IndieWire". At the 5th Asian Awards held in Taiwan it won Best Asian-American Film and the audience choice award. "The Hindu" wrote "What constitutes a great film? The answer is dependent on the person to whom the question is posed. But, for this reviewer, what makes a film great is its ability to evoke different feelings in different people. There are films that move you, there are films that make you laugh, and then there are films that inspire." "Rediff" echoed similar sentiments writing "It's amazing how an unpretentious little slice of reality can render reality so vividly! Perhaps the simplicity of the director's technique help achieve this. Perhaps it was his lighting. Perhaps it was his camerawork. Perhaps it was his choice of colour... But what Hansal Mehta did with "Hum Kaun Hain", he did it superbly." The reviewer wrote that "...there's no denying the writer's artistry. He has managed to make the actors come alive before our very eyes." "IndieWire" also wrote "The above is an apt description for Hansal Mehta's perfectly crafted film "Hum Kaun Hain" ("Don't Be Afraid"). This small indie drama about two Shahab Hosseini and Leila Hatami, married in real life, plays like one of those fairy-tale romances that people tell one another when they're in love. Anyone who has had the good fortune to fall in love, will be able to relate. Those who can't fall in love will be able to relate anyway." "The New York Times" also praised the film, writing "Hansal Mehta's "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark," an Indian film made during a stint in Iran, is about the precarious nature of happiness. A slight romantic comedy with an un-Hollywood ending, it takes place on a single day in Tehran. It opens with a captivating extended shot that follows characters through different rooms of a high-rise apartment building before tracking them downstairs and out into the city. eccc085e13
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