Director: Ebrahim Hatamikia

Cast: Hassan Abbasi, Kobra Farrokhi, Habibollah Bahmani, Asghar Naghizade, Fariborz Arabnia

Vasle Nikan is a 1992 Iranian drama-romance film directed by Ebrahim Hatamikia, set against the backdrop of the Iran-Iraq War. In just 85 minutes, it examines how ordinary people cling to love, family, and tradition even as conflict reshapes every corner of their lives.

What is Vasle Nikan about?

Young Amir refuses to let war silence the most important day of his life. Against the advice of those around him, he pushes forward with plans for a wedding celebration while rockets and uncertainty hang over the region. The story follows Amir, his bride, and the community of family members who gather around them — each carrying their own fear, their own hope, and their own reasons for wanting this moment of joy to exist. The film holds its tension between the pull of duty to something larger and the deeply human need to mark a new beginning. Hatamikia frames the domestic and the catastrophic side by side, letting the weight of the war press in without ever quite overwhelming the fragile celebration at the center.

Cast & crew

Ebrahim Hatamikia directs with the grounded, intimate style he brought to a generation of Iranian war cinema. Hassan Abbasi leads as Amir, anchoring the film's emotional core. Kobra Farrokhi, Habibollah Bahmani, Asghar Naghizade, and Fariborz Arabnia form the ensemble of family and community figures whose presence gives the wedding its warmth and its tension.

Context & significance

Vasle Nikan belongs to the tradition of Iranian Sacred Defense cinema — films made in the years following the Iran-Iraq War that look not at the front lines alone but at the civilian experience: the villages, the families, the rituals that had to keep going. For diaspora viewers, these films carry particular weight. They document a Iran many older Iranians lived through and many younger ones have only heard about from parents or grandparents. Hatamikia became one of the defining voices of this genre, and Vasle Nikan shows why: he finds the human scale inside historical trauma, refusing to make war the only story in the room.

Where & how to watch

Vasle Nikan is available on K-Time in its original Persian audio. Watch on the web browser, your TV, or your phone — no VPN required, no geo-blocking, no extra download needed. Subscription includes access to the full K-Time catalog; cancel anytime.