

Cinema Trust Cinema Cinema Site wrote:
A joke with the war crimes and the most hated person in contemporary Iranian history, Saddam Hussein, who is currently in the medium of cinema, is a kind of dirty and a few players playing with the spirit of the Iranian people.
The film is about Saddam Hussein’s replacement that is supposed to carry out an operation in Tehran, even the story’s summary is unmistakable. In world cinema, it is not similar to such a product that the dictatorship transcends the entirety of a country and then depicts a person in a medium.
One is the great dictator film written, directed and produced by Charlie Chaplin, who deals with Hitler and was pre -production in the year when many people did not threaten Nazism and were released in cinema in year 6. Hinkle (Hitler) mistakenly uses the opportunity to deliver a sermon on peace and humanity.
The next work is Stalin’s death film from the English director of Armando Yanuchi, in the black comedy genre, made in year 2, when it was more than five years after Stalin’s death. The film deals with the last days of the Soviet dictatorship and events after its death. The fact is that Stalin never threatened British borders and was also a allies in World War II. Unless it has an important message in its context, but the unconscious and raw director insults the consciousness of a nation by making hundreds and weak endors that convey any message to the audience and mocks eight years of sacred defense.
If this trend continues, in the near future we will see comedy effects on ISIS, Abdul Malik Rigi and so on.