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Celluloid
critic The Seed of the Sacred Fig (2024)

The Seed of the Sacred Fig Review: The State Cracks a Family From Within

★★★★★ 5/5

Verdict

A blistering, courageous political thriller that turns one household into a microcosm of a regime. Urgent, suspenseful and morally fearless.

The regime at the dinner table

Rasoulof’s central conceit is devastatingly simple: an investigating judge’s gun vanishes inside his own home just as nationwide protests erupt, and his paranoia turns inward on his wife and daughters. The authoritarian state, which the film observes complicit and cruel in the courtroom, is thus dramatized inside a single family — surveillance, suspicion and coercion migrating from the nation into the living room. The personal is not merely political; it is the same machinery at a smaller scale.

Made under threat

It is impossible to separate the film from the conditions of its making — shot clandestinely by a director facing prison, then smuggled abroad — and that danger charges every frame. The domestic-thriller mechanics are genuinely gripping, but they carry the weight of lived risk. When the daughters begin to defy their father, the generational rupture reads as the film’s own act of defiance against a system that demands obedience.

Slow-burn dread

Rasoulof builds tension with patience, letting mistrust metastasise scene by scene until the household is a pressure chamber. The final act’s shift into something closer to genre — pursuit, confrontation, a reckoning in a crumbling family home — pays off the accumulated unease without betraying the film’s seriousness.

The women’s revolt

The film’s beating heart is its daughters, whose refusal to accept their father’s version of reality mirrors a generation’s refusal to accept the regime’s. Their defiance is the film’s hope, hard-won and costly.

Verdict

The Seed of the Sacred Fig is a work of real bravery — a taut allegory that indicts a state by dramatizing it as a family. Tense, humane and unmissable.