By John Serba
Published June 17, 2025, 8:45 p.m. ET
You won’t be able to rip your eyes away from The Seed of the Sacred Fig (now streaming on Hulu), an Iranian film that stands among the best of 2024. The story of its making is as fraught as the one it tells: Filmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof, who’d previously been jailed by the Iranian government for criticizing the regime in his films, secretly shot Sacred Fig in bits and pieces, learned he was facing another eight-year prison sentence and escaped to Germany with some of the cast and crew, eventually presenting the movie at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival. Meanwhile, two of its stars, Soheila Golestani and Missagh Zareh, faced legal repercussions and aren’t permitted to leave Iran. The NEON-distributed film earned two things – an Oscar nomination for Best International Feature, and our respect for bravely and loudly speaking out against authoritarianism.
THE SEED OF THE SACRED FIG: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?
The Gist: Real-life events frame the fictional story in Sacred Fig: In 2022, Tehran resident Mahsa Amini violated Iranian laws for properly wearing a hijab, was arrested and died in custody. The official statement said she died of a heart attack, although leaked evidence suggested she was severely beaten by police. Her death sparked weeks of protests that grew violent and resulted in numerous deaths.
Against this backdrop, Iman (Zareh) gets a promotion. He’ll be an investigator for criminal cases. It’ll earn him a nice pay bump and a more spacious home, and afford him an opportunity to move up to judge status. He’s also issued a pistol for self-defense, because with the title comes the risk of retaliation. The bullets go plink plink plink plink as they’re dropped on the table in front of him. Does he know how to properly use the gun? Who knows. But he keeps it tucked in the back of his pants, beneath his suit jacket, and at night drops it in a bedside drawer. During his first days on the job, he’s asked – no, pressured (read: essentially ordered) to rubber-stamp death sentences without even a single gesture of due process. He’s troubled by this, as any moral person would be. And as arrests from the protests pile up, he continues to do the same. Then he returns home late at night, almost in a daze, and falls into bed. Dare he consider not toeing the line?
After a particularly brutal day, Iman undresses to shower and leaves his gun in a pile of laundry, which on one end is understandable, because he’s mentally exhausted, but on the other, is indefensible and careless. But his wife, Najmeh (Golestani), picks up his dirty clothes – as the woman of the house, this is one of her many duties – and puts the gun in the bedside drawer. It’s also Najmeh’s job to make sure their daughters toe the line of “respectability” due to their father’s position; they’ll wear hijabs properly in public, they won’t post photos of themselves on social media and they won’t go anywhere they shouldn’t. Sana (Setareh Maleki) is in her teens and her older sister Rezvan (Mahsa Rostami) is a college student. They share a bedroom. But soon enough, thanks to their father’s new job, they’ll move to a place where they’ll have their own rooms.
Rezvan has a close friend named Sadaf (Niousha Akhshi). One moment, the three girls and Najmeh paint each other’s nails – the polish will be washed off before Iman gets home – and pluck each other’s eyebrows. The next moment, Najmeh uses the same tweezers to pluck buckshot out of Sadaf’s face. She got caught up in the protests at her school. Najmeh cleans the girl up and covers half her face with bandages and sends her away, and Sadaf is soon arrested, her phone confiscated. Sadaf’s safety is not Najmeh’s concern, though. Iman’s job is too important. He cannot be affiliated with a protester. He works for the other side. He could get fired. (Or worse? One can only assume.) And then they’d have to stay in this perfectly fine apartment with two bedrooms.
Sana and Rezvan are upset, and not just about their friend. Iman miraculously comes home in time for dinner one night, and as he eats with his family, a fissure grows. It’s generational and ideological: The girls are sympathetic with the protesters’ cause – “Down with theocracy!”, go the chants on the street, and Sana and Rezvan note how social media videos of the protests don’t at all align with the TV reports their mother watches. Iman and Najmeh are devout Muslims; he makes vague statements that the current regime has “room for improvement” but is devoted to opposing “the enemy,” and that everyone is against their country. Much of dinner goes uneaten that evening. The next morning, he dresses for work and opens the bedside drawer and the gun is missing. And right about now, Chekhov would like a word.

What Movies Will It Remind You Of?: I’m Still Here, about the trauma wrought upon a family living under authoritarian rule in 1970s Brazil, is the yin to Sacred Fig’s yang – both are about the intersection of the political and the personal, although the former film depicts how a family manages to hold itself together, while the latter depicts a family being torn apart.
Performance Worth Watching: Golestani : The Seed of the Sacred Fig :: Fernanda Torres : I’m Still Here. Maleki and Rostami are also extraordinary.
Memorable Dialogue: Rezvan side-eyes the TV news:
Rezvan: It’s nothing but lies.
Najmeh: How do you know?
Rezvan. I live in this country. I’ve got eyes.
Sex and Skin: None.
Our Take: This family’s story is the greater societal conflict in microcosm – Iman is the patriarchal ruler around whom all familial interests revolve. Najmeh enables this dynamic for the sake of tradition and, as eventually comes to light, out of fear. Sana and Rezvan are young, idealistic and open to upending old rules that restrict their freedom. One of the great truths about the human condition: You are beholden to the things you learn in your youth. Change is inevitable; sometimes it’s sudden, sometimes it’s drawn-out, but it’s always difficult.
Is revolution necessary in this household? I find myself speaking in metaphorical terms just as Rasoulof does with The Seed of the Sacred Fig, as the film subtly transitions from literal to literary, into parable territory. Iman doesn’t shy away from draconian measures against his own wife and children in order to find the gun – he faces three years in prison if it doesn’t turn up – especially as his paranoia grows in the wake of potential public exposure of his professional “accomplishments.” He’s caught in a tangle of religious and political zealotry that puts everything in his life at risk. Is this precarious situation his own fault? Yes. Is it society’s fault? Also yes.
I risk diminishing Najmeh, Sana and Rezvan, who are the primary characters in this story, as I prod at the source of their problems. Golestani, Maleki and Rostami are brilliant in their naturalist, eventually slightly elevated performances, and form the beating heart of the narrative. Rasoulof clings to their point-of-view and sympathizes with them not with an inflated and righteous sense of feminism, but with basic assertions of individual liberty. The hypocrisy and cruelty he portrays is self-evident. The solutions are not, which the director communicates by building to an excruciatingly tense climax, dropping his characters into a near-labyrinth, chasing a MacGuffin that’s also a symbol – the gun. There’s no good solution to this situation. But that doesn’t mean it’s hopeless.
Our Call: The Seed of the Sacred Fig is an amazing film. You can sense the peril and passion in every frame. STREAM IT.
John Serba is a freelance writer and film critic based in Grand Rapids, Michigan.