Staff Pick Premiere: "The Kites" by Seyed Payam Hosseini

Blair used to make fake blogs for Vimeo, evidently they’re not as fake anymore. When he’s not curating Staff Picks, he’s also playing with reality through his iPhone @diregular. Or eating sunflower seeds, which he blames baseball for.
Blair Barnes

This week’s Staff Pick Premiere is Seyed Payam Hosseini’s “The Kites,” a poignant story from the point of view of a kid, situated on the war-torn border between Iran and Iraq. 

Through what begins as a distant call-and-response, a young boy must figure out a solution when a young girl’s kite ends up on the opposite side of a mine-laden divide. Between them is a barrier in the most literal sense, but cross-border languages present yet another obstacle. With the help of friends and an elder, the boy embarks on a mission to return the kite in one piece.

In many ways, this slice of life is symbolic of a sort of radical imagination: the palpable care for one another, the innovation in problem-solving, the courage to reconcile what is lost. With “The Kites,” Hosseini manages to image a film that feels like such a ray of active hope, despite the nearness of a conflicted past.

We reached out to Seyed to talk about his inspiration for the film, challenges, and casting. Hosseini’s responses are in prose below:

Missing alt text!

On inspiration:

"We live in a historical geography

Kurdistan is a land that is divided into four parts

We live in the Kurdish part of Iran

Border is not a new story for us

And this is what made it look like love, peace, and friendship

From the children's point of view

Connect the borders

For me, the tree is a sign of authority, a sign of endurance

The kite for me is a sign of freedom and liberation, flying in free lands

And that helped a lot to build 'The Kites.'"

On challenges:

"Making a short film is not always difficult

And when a filmmaker wants to make an independent film

Everything gets difficult

Building a believable border was the most important challenge facing the project

The location I have been looking for for years

Fortunately, I found the location in a remote border village, a mountain away from Iraqi Kurdistan

But the love of making a film eases all the problems and difficulties."

Missing alt text!

On casting:

"Choosing an actor is very important and complex for me

And I always use amateurs to choose my actors

Sometimes even the people I invite to act have no knowledge of cinema and how to make a film

It was very important for the kites that the child actors could be believable

And accept their geography and story

For this reason, I was mostly looking for rural children to choose from

Until I was able to find these children in the lower part of the city (slum)

I tested them, their IQ convinced me they were my choice

I read scripts with them several times, but only to understand the story of the film

And fortunately, I was very pleased with the final result of the film from all four child actors."

His advice to aspiring filmmakers:

"As a young filmmaker

Apart from academic education which requires filmmaking

Watch movies, read and write specialized books and novels

Especially a collection of short stories

And making low-budget independent short films

It can provide the conditions for us to start making films as a carbald filmmaker

Learn to make independent films

Read, write, and watch."

Missing alt text!

On what's next:

"After 'The Kites'

I made two short films

Russian vodka short film with a child theme

Non-mahram short film (funded by a thousand women) This film is about violence against women

My next project is the genocide of the Kurds in Iraqi Kurdistan by Saddam Hussein called "Beyond the Hills," which we are currently pre-producing."

Watch more Staff Picks

Go beyond staff picks and learn more about Vimeo’s video creation, editing, hosting, and video analytics tools to help enhance your videos by adding music to video, resizing videos, and more so you can make, share, and manage your videos.

More from the Vimeo blog

Even in the year of 2022, “2002” stands out as an instant Staff Pick comedy classic.

Staff Pick Premiere: "2002 (YEAR OF THE HORSE)" by Matias & Mathias

After a vampiric culture vulture invades a Black hair salon, the staff of the salon must stick to their roots — or be swept up, one by one.

Staff Pick Premiere: "Hair Wolf" by Mariama Diallo

A young drama student must reconcile the potential pros and cons of a defining lead performance act.

Staff Pick Premiere: "EXPOSED" by Anna Fredrikke Bjerke

Two people taking a break to talk in large dirt field

Staff Pick Award at CIFF: “The Diamond” by Caitlyn Greene

Paul Bush takes us on the most imaginative ride in this week's Staff Pick Premiere.

Staff Pick Premiere: "Ride" by Paul Bush

Inspired by true events, this award-winning film from Brazilian director Carolina Markowicz explores the darker sides of adoption, identity, and belonging.

Staff Pick Premiere: "The Orphan" from Carolina Markowicz

"Retouch" by Kaveh Mazaheri is a shocking film about a young Iranian wife who must make a difficult choice: save her husband or save herself.

Staff Pick Premiere: “Retouch,” directed by Kaveh Mazaheri

Matthew Rankin's award-winning film about inventor Nikola Tesla's last days is as electrifying as the man himself.

Staff Pick Premiere: The Utopian Inventor