Nima Dabirzadeh

Filmes

Without Her
Colorist
Roya and Babak are a young couple who intend to emigrate from Iran. Roya's encounter with an anonymous girl is the beginning of strange events in their life.
Botox
Colorist
A irmã de Akram e Azar mentem sobre o desaparecimento de seu irmão, contando a todos que ele fugiu para a Alemanha. Com o tempo, essa "mentira" ganha vida própria e leva todos a lugares sombrios e misteriosos.
Bone Marrow
Colorist
What's your problem now ?! Do you mean it's not legal ?! Does this mean everything is always legal here ?! Are we all right ?! No one has done anything wrong so far ?!
When Did You See Sahar Last Time?
Colorist
A girl Sahar who is from a poor family of Tehran's suburbs is not coming back home one night. The mother goes to the police and informs about that. In that same day a body of a girl who is very look like Sahar is find. The parents are summon to recognize their girl's body but it turns out that it belongs to another girl. Major Saeed intervenes in the case and is after answers.
Flaming
Colorist
The story of a man who feels that he has not become anything in his life which is affecting all his life.
My Tribe
Editor
Life is like a movie. Whether it's short or long, it begins somewhere and ends unexpectedly somewhere else. We ought to watch it all involuntarily.
Shirin
Still Photographer
A hundred and fourteen famous Iranian theater and cinema actresses and a French star: mute spectators at a theatrical representation of Khosrow and Shirin, a Persian poem from the twelfth century, put on stage by Kiarostami. The development of the text -- long a favorite in Persia and the Middle East -- remains invisible to the viewer of the film, the whole story is told by the faces of the women watching the show.
Shirin
First Assistant Camera
A hundred and fourteen famous Iranian theater and cinema actresses and a French star: mute spectators at a theatrical representation of Khosrow and Shirin, a Persian poem from the twelfth century, put on stage by Kiarostami. The development of the text -- long a favorite in Persia and the Middle East -- remains invisible to the viewer of the film, the whole story is told by the faces of the women watching the show.