MARIA DUARTE defends a solid, late-career Spielberg conspiracy flick that calls for empathy in a hostile world
IT WAS something of a cosmic coincidence that thousands of people descended on London to protest against US President Donald Trump’s fascistic Muslim ban on the night I booted up 1979 Revolution: Black Friday for the first time.
Taking place during the Iranian revolution of that year, it’s a historical point-and-click adventure game — very much in the vain of Telltale’s excellent the Walking Dead series, which basically resurrected the genre from its ’90s grave.
The impressive voice acting and engaging and varied cast of characters all help capture the intricacies of the Iranian revolution over some two hours.
KATAYOUN SHAHANDEH surveys Iran’s cultural heritage and explains what has been damaged and what could be lost
MOHAMMAD OMIDVAR, a senior figure in the Tudeh Party of Iran, tells the Morning Star that mass protests are rooted in poverty, corruption and neoliberal rule and warns against monarchist revival and US-engineered regime change
The Committee for the Defence of Iranian People’s Rights (Codir) welcomes demonstrations across Iran, which have put pressure upon the theocratic dictatorship, but warns against intervention by the United States to force Iran in a particular direction
In the second of two articles, STEVE BISHOP looks at how the 1979 revolution’s aims are obfuscated to create a picture where the monarchists are the opposition to the theocracy, not the burgeoning workers’ and women’s movement on the streets of Iran


