Cast: Parviz Sayyad
Samad Be Madrese Miravad is a 1973 Iranian comedy film starring Parviz Sayyad, following the beloved folk character Samad as he navigates the chaos and comedy of enrolling in school for the first time as an adult, delivering sharp social humor wrapped in warmth.
What is Samad Be Madrese Miravad about?
Samad, the eternally naive but big-hearted village everyman beloved by Iranian audiences, finds himself thrust into the unfamiliar world of formal education. His attempts to fit in among much younger students expose the absurdities of social convention, bureaucracy, and class expectation. Every classroom mishap and hallway encounter becomes a stage for gentle satire — Samad's earnest cluelessness cutting through pretension with disarming honesty. The film builds its comedy not from meanness but from the gap between Samad's rural common sense and the rigid rules of an institution designed for a world he was never quite invited into. Tensions mount as his schoolmates, teachers, and the school system itself struggle to know what to make of him.
The K-Time take
Sayyad's Samad character was already a cultural institution by 1973, and this installment uses the school setting to sharpen the series' social commentary. The comedy lands because it is rooted in genuine affection — for the character, for the audience, and for the Iran of ordinary people that the films consistently championed.
Cast & crew
Parviz Sayyad, one of the most celebrated comic actors and filmmakers of pre-revolution Iranian cinema, carries the film in the central role of Samad. Sayyad created and embodied this character across multiple films, making Samad one of the most recognizable and beloved figures in the history of Persian-language cinema.
Context & significance
The Samad film series holds a singular place in Iranian cultural memory. Made in the early 1970s, these comedies used a deceptively simple format — a good-natured rural outsider encounters modern urban institutions — to offer gentle but pointed critiques of class, modernization, and social hypocrisy. For diaspora audiences, the Samad films function both as nostalgia and as a window into a pre-revolution Iran that was confident, witty, and self-aware. Watching them today is an act of cultural retrieval, reconnecting viewers with a comedic tradition that shaped generations of Persian speakers at home and abroad.
Where & how to watch
Samad Be Madrese Miravad is available on K-Time with original Persian audio. Watch on the web, your smart TV, or your phone — no VPN needed, no geo-blocking, no extra download. Cancel your subscription anytime.