There Is No Evil

7.5
20202h 31m

Set against the backdrop of Iran's strict and oppressive legal system, this anthology film tells the stories of four men who each face a moral crisis when having to deal with death penalties.

Production

Logo for Europe Media Nest
Logo for Filminiran

Available For Free On

Logo for Kanopy

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: UK Trailer

UK Trailer

Thumbnail for video: There Is No Evil - Official Trailer

There Is No Evil - Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Virtual Intro with Babak Tabarraee, Ph.D

Virtual Intro with Babak Tabarraee, Ph.D

Thumbnail for video: Full AFI Fest Conversation

Full AFI Fest Conversation

Cast

More Like This

Reviews

B

badelf

8/10

Kudos to Mohammad Rasoulof for making a film banned by Iran's authoritarian government. The subject matter alone demonstrates extraordinary courage: four separate stories exploring how ordinary people navigate complicity, conscience, resistance, and moral responsibility when faced with, or forced into, state-sanctioned execution.

What makes "There Is No Evil" particularly powerful is how it refuses easy answers. Each segment presents a different relationship to capital punishment—those who participate, those who refuse, those who live with the consequences, those who flee. Rasoulof understands that evil isn't an abstract force but the accumulation of choices made under pressure, the compromises ordinary people make to survive within brutal systems.

It's tempting to view this as a distant problem, something happening in a country fairly remote to the Western world. But that distance is an illusion. The trend of governments in the Western world is moving toward the authoritarian mode of Iran. Maybe not as severe yet, but nonetheless a profound concern for those of us who believe in humanitarian rights. "There Is No Evil" isn't just about Iran; it's a warning about what happens when citizens stop resisting, when complicity becomes normalized, when good people choose silence.

This is a powerful film. It really hits hard.

You've reached the end.