Ilgar Najaf
Pomegranate Orchard , Ilgar Najaf (2017)
Ilgar Najaf is an Azerbaijani screenwriter, film director and producer. His debut feature Buta premiered at Tallinn Black Nights and Palm Springs Film Festival; his second feature Pomegranate Orchard premiered at Karlovy Vary, Cairo, and the Eurasian International Film Festival, where it won the Jury Award. Pomegranate Orchard was selected as the seventh Azerbaijani submission in history for the Foreign Language Oscar. It was not nominated.
In an exclusive interview with Filmatique, Ilgar Najaf discusses Chekhov, vanishing ways of life in rural Azerbaijan and his next project.
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FILMATIQUE: Pomegranate Orchard takes place on a generational farm in contemporary Azerbaijan. It has been stated that you adapted this story from Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard. What resonances do you see between pre-revolution Russia and present-day Azerbaijan? Why did you want to adapt this particular story to our times?
ILGAR NAJAF: The essence of the story lies not where it goes narratively or geographically, but rather in the contradictions that occur in the human spirit. That is the important matter in the story— the target is human. Chekhov's greatness is that his heroes are always relevant and interesting.
FLMTQ: Shamil, the owner of the orchard, shares his home with Sara, his daughter-in-law and her young son Jalal. When his son Gabil shows up one day after a twelve-year absence, his father is rightfully suspicious; it seems Sara is just happy to have her husband home. Gabil slowly reveals himself to be manipulative, impulsive, and violent, bringing with him the promise of a better life in Moscow we know will not materialize. Does Gabil embody a certain generation of Azerbaijan today, or is he simply a character?
IN: These heroes are not far from us. They are not some people in a region alienated from us, but rather living in and around us. And such a life is still going on.
Pomegranate Orchard , Ilgar Najaf (2017)