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	There Is No EvilFriday, May 14, 2021 4:15 PM Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof defied a lifelong ban on filmmaking to deliver this piercing, four-part drama about the costs of living under a repressive, brutal government. In-Theater Screenings
 
	
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                                    | Reserved Seating Adult - $12.75 |  |  
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                                    | Reserved Seating Seniors (65 +) with Valid ID - $11.00 |  |  
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                                    | Reserved Seating Students w/ Valid ID (up to 25 years) - $11.00 |  |  
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                                    | Reserved Seating Child (12 and Under) - $8.00 |  |  
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 Working in defiance of a lifelong ban on filmmaking, dissident director Mohammad Rasoulof delivers a piercing drama about a subject he knows well: the costs of living under a repressive, brutal government. Winner of the Golden Bear, the top prize at the Berlin Film Festival, There Is No Evil is a film in four chapters, each telling a different story related to the death penalty in contemporary Iran. The first story concerns a family man who, as we come to see, pays a grave moral price for his comfortable middle-class life. The second and third chapters focus on conscripted soldiers – in Iran, it is often these men who are forced to perform executions – and both segments explore the tension and turmoil that can come with such harsh coercion. The final section involves a family secret, which brings the film to its powerful conclusion. Suspenseful, mysterious, and shot through with a sense of urgency, Rasoulof's work bears the mark of an artist who sets his own terms – and who knows just how to captivate an audience. 
 
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