The movie "Muhammad, Messenger of God" already recalls the grandeur and expense of a Cecil B DeMille film, with the narrow alleyways and a replica Kaaba shrine built here in the remote village of Allahyar.
But by even showing the back of the Prophet Muhammad as a child before he was called upon by Allah, the most expensive film in Iranian history already has been criticised before its even widely released, calling into question who ultimately will see the Quranic story come to life on the big screen.
Biblical stories have inspired dozens of films from the 1920s all the way to recent blockbusters like "Noah" starring Russell Crowe and Ridley Scott's biblical epic "Exodus: Gods and Kings."
But in Islam, portraying the Prophet Muhammad has long been taboo for many. Islamic tradition is full of written descriptions of Muhammad and his qualities, describing him as the ideal human being.
But clerics generally have agreed that trying to depict that ideal is forbidden.
But while Sunni Islam, the religion's dominant branch, widely rejects any depictions of Muhammad, his close relatives or companions, Shiite Islam doesn't.
The late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomenei, who led Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution and later became the country's supreme leader, reportedly even kept a picture similar to young Muhammad in his room for years.
In the new 190-minute film, the story focuses on Muhammad's childhood, never showing his face. The movie instead uses others to tell his story, like his grandfather Abdul-Muttalib, portrayed by Iranian actor Ali Reza Shoja Nouri.
For his vision, Majidi hired Academy Award winning visual effects supervisor and filmmaker Scott E Anderson, three-time Oscar-winning Italian director of photography Vittorio Storaro and music producer Allah-Rakha Rahman, who won two Academy Awards for his work on "Slumdog Millionaire."
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