Children of Heaven (1997)

Movie · 1997 · Drama, Family · 1h 28m · FA

Curator score: 8.7/10 (142K ratings)

A Little Secret... Their Biggest Adventure!

Overview

Zohre's shoes are gone; her older brother Ali lost them. They are poor, there are no shoes for Zohre until they come up with an idea: they will share one pair of shoes. School awaits.

Ratings

Director

Majid Majidi

Production

Kanoon, Miramax

Cast

Amir Farrokh Hashemian, Bahare Seddiqi, Nafise Jafar-Mohammadi, Reza Naji, Fereshte Sarabandi, Kamal Mirkarimi, Behzad Rafi, Dariush Mokhtari, Mohammad-Hasan Hosseinian, Masume Dair, Kambiz Peykarnegar, Hasan Roohparvari, Abbas-Ali Roomandi, Jafar Seyfollahi, Qolamreza Maleki, Mohammad Haj Hosseini

Curator Review

Verdict

A tender, deceptively small-scale drama that turns a lost pair of shoes into a moving portrait of childhood, family responsibility, and quiet resilience. Its emotional power comes from understatement, natural performances, and the way ordinary hardship becomes suspenseful and deeply human.

Best for

  • Viewers who love intimate, humanist dramas
  • Fans of childhood stories with real emotional stakes
  • People drawn to Iranian cinema and neorealist storytelling
  • Anyone who appreciates simple premises that build to a strong emotional payoff

Skip if

  • You want fast pacing or big plot twists
  • You prefer glossy production values over naturalism
  • You’re looking for light, purely feel-good family entertainment
  • You dislike stories centered on poverty and everyday struggle

Overview

Children of Heaven is a beautifully modest film that finds enormous feeling in a tiny crisis. A lost pair of shoes becomes the engine for a story about siblings, shame, love, and the daily improvisations of a family with very little to spare. The film never strains for effect; it trusts the details, and that restraint is what makes it hit so hard.

Worth noting

What stands out most is how completely it sees the world at a child’s scale. School, errands, and a pair of shoes can feel like matters of destiny when you’re young, and the film honors that perspective without condescension. The performances are natural and disarming, and the emotional rhythm feels earned rather than manufactured.

Bottom line

It’s also a fine example of Iranian humanist cinema at its most accessible: simple, clear, and deeply compassionate. The ending lands with a quiet force that lingers well after the credits, not because it is grand, but because it feels true.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Maevez · 464 likes

Children of Heaven is the story of Ali, a boy who lost his little sister's shoes and doesn't have money to buy her a new pair. This movie reminded me a lot of Where Is the Friend's Home? and now I'm 100% sure that the best movies about childhood can be found in iranian cinema, the way they portray kids experiencing guilt and the want and need of fixing their mistakes but being unable to is always heartbreaking. The idea… more

Tao A (3.5★) · 383 likes

Iran has absolutely mastered the art of making literal children’s movies for grown ass adults.

Edgar Cochran ✝️🍋 (5★) · 381 likes

In 1997, Iran produced three extraordinary films: Bacheha-Ye Aseman (Children of Heaven), Ayneh (The Mirror) and Ta'm e Guilass (Taste of Cherry). Master Majid Majidi is pretty much known for his overabundant humanism, and whereas several films treat such topics in a very fashioned, unrealistic way, this film offers believable possibilities, overwhelming magic and a finale so inspiring you'll feel your heart exploding. Thanks, Majidi, for such a needed tribute to neorealism! 96/100

Preet (4.5★) · 237 likes

one pair of shoes and a lifetime of emotions

Michael James (4.5★) · 228 likes

A simple heartwarming movie that brims with love and compassion. Majid Majidi captures the emotional genuineness of children and their relationship in such a beautiful heart tugging manner. The drama is best experienced than explained, don’t miss out on this feel good watch.

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Topics

Iranian cinema, humanist drama, neorealism, childhood perspective, family bonds, poverty, coming-of-age, emotional realism, school life, quiet heartbreak

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