Skip to main content
Job vacancy with the National Education Union
Bedroom Farsi
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE recommends a quietly powerful drama that examines an Iranian mother and daughter who escape domestic abuse
Zar Amir Ebrahimi and Selina Zahednia in Shayda [IMDb]

Shayda (15)
Directed by Noora Niasari


 
THIS quietly powerful drama set in Australia in 1995 explores a clash of cultures as it shows the resilience, strength and bravery of Iranian women as they battle domestic abuse and fight for their basic human rights. 
 
Terribly moving even if unsettling to watch, it is a formidable debut feature by writer-director Noora Niasari and based on her real-life experience. At the age of five  she fled family violence to live in an Australian women’s shelter with her Iranian mother. 
 
The film focuses on Shayda (Zar Amir Ebrahimi from Holy Spider), a young Iranian woman, who escapes her abusive husband Hossein (Osamah Sami) with her six-year-old daughter Mona (impressive newcomer Selina Zahednia). They find refuge in a women’s shelter down under where she tries to lead as normal a life as possible for her child. Her world is upended when her ex is suddenly awarded visitation rights while they await the custody hearing. He begins to threaten and intimidate an already traumatised Shayda, following her every move. 
 
Ebrahimi captures Shayda’s vulnerability, her constant fear and her determination to protect her daughter at all costs in a breathtaking performance, while the adorable Zahednia steals the film.  
 
Shot in Melbourne the film veers from magical moments between mother and daughter as Shayda teaches Mona Farsi how to Persian dance, to read poetry and to celebrate Nowruz, the Persian New Year, to heart stopping moments when Shayda has to hand Mona to her father, not knowing if he will abscond with her. The threat of violence simmers under the surface as the tension escalates until the explosive conclusion.  
 
Also, it is bone-chilling to hear Shayda describing to her case worker the abuse she endured, including being raped by her husband. He tells her he planned to get her pregnant in order to force her to return to Iran. 
 
The fierce criticisms Shayda faces from her mum and other members of the Iranian community for leaving her violent husband, changing her appearance, not wearing the hijab and seeking a life without fear is staggering. It is in contrast to the support and solidarity she encounters at the women’s shelter. 
 
Thought-provoking and haunting Shayda is a homage to Niasari’s mother and all Iranian women fighting for their rights. 

In cinemas July 19

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
one battle
Film of the Week / 25 September 2025
25 September 2025

MARIA DUARTE is entertained by a wry portrait of befuddled resistance to US authoritarianism

fotw
Film of the week / 18 September 2025
18 September 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends the powerful study of an underfunded reform school and the staff who struggle to do good

sanatorium
Film of the week / 4 September 2025
4 September 2025

MARIA DUARTE cherishes the flashes of absurd humour and theme of community healing in a documentary set in a Soviet-era Black Sea sanatorium

motherboard
Film of the Week / 14 August 2025
14 August 2025

MARIA DUARTE recommends a remarkable documentary, culled from 20 years of smartphone footage, that documents the trials of being a single parent

Similar stories
THE PERILS OF INTERNET DATING: (L) Ruaridh Mollica in Sebast
Cinema / 3 April 2025
3 April 2025
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Sebastian, Four Mothers, Restless, and The Most Precious of Cargoes
Niousha Akhshi in The Seed of the Sacred Fig
Film of the Week: / 6 February 2025
6 February 2025
The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE is enthralled by a complex thriller, but advises caution in accepting its depiction of reality
(L) Nightbitch; (R) Porcelain War
Cinema / 5 December 2024
5 December 2024
Horror for young mothers and Western presidents, a one-legged wrestler and weaponised art; the Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Nightbitch, Rumours, Unstoppable and Porcelain War
(L) The wild Robot; (R) A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things
Cinema / 17 October 2024
17 October 2024
Serial killer dating; courtroom charm; synaesthetic inspiration and jungle book robotics - The Star's critic MARIA DUARTE reviews Woman of the Hour, The Crime is Mine, A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things and The Wild Robot