Director: Sirus Alvand
Cast: Mahshid Afsharzadeh, Morteza Ahmadi, Majid Alizadeh
Yekbar Baraye Hamishe is a 1993 Iranian drama film directed by Sirus Alvand, following a couple whose marriage dissolves on the eve of the husband's emigration, while his wife — a war refugee — prepares to return to her devastated hometown in Khuzestan's south. A quiet, emotionally precise portrait of separation and survival.
What is Yekbar Baraye Hamishe about?
As preparations for departure reach their final hours, a husband and wife confront the reality that their paths are diverging permanently. He is bound for a new life abroad; she, a woman who fled her southern hometown during the Iran-Iraq War, chooses to go back and rebuild what was lost. The film unfolds on this single charged day, tracing the unspoken grief between two people who once shared a life. Through small gestures and restrained dialogue, Alvand reveals how war, displacement, and migration fracture ordinary families — not with dramatic confrontation but with the quiet, irreversible act of letting go.
Cast & crew
Director Sirus Alvand is known for socially grounded Iranian cinema that centers working-class and war-affected communities. Lead actress Mahshid Afsharzadeh brings understated warmth to the role of the returning wife, while veteran comedian and actor Morteza Ahmadi grounds the husband's departure in weariness rather than triumph. Majid Alizadeh rounds out the principal cast.
Context & significance
Released in 1993, Yekbar Baraye Hamishe arrives in the immediate aftermath of the Iran-Iraq War's psychological shadow — a period when Iranian cinema was grappling honestly with what that decade of conflict had done to families, homes, and the idea of belonging. For diaspora viewers, this film resonates on two registers simultaneously: the woman's choice to return mirrors the pull many Iranians still feel toward their homeland, while the man's emigration echoes the journeys that scattered the diaspora across North America and Europe. The Khuzestan setting — a war-front province — gives the story a specific geographic grief that feels both local and universal.
Where & how to watch
Yekbar Baraye Hamishe is available on K-Time in its original Persian audio. Watch on your browser, TV, or phone — no VPN needed, no geo-blocking, no extra download required. Subscription includes the full catalog; cancel anytime.