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Ten (2002 film)

Ten (Persian: ده; appears as 10 during the opening credits) is a 2002 Iranian docufiction film starring Mania Akbari and Amina Maher.[1]

Ten
Directed byAbbas Kiarostami[a]
Produced byMarin Karmitz
Abbas Kiarostami
StarringMania Akbari
Amina Maher[b]
CinematographyAbbas Kiarostami
Edited byAbbas Kiarostami
Vahid Ghazi
Bahman Kiarostami
Music byHoward Blake
Release date
  • May 20, 2002 (2002-05-20) (Cannes Film Festival)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryIran
LanguagePersian

The film premiered May 20, 2002 at the 55th Cannes Film Festival, where it was nominated for the Palme d'Or.[2] It received positive reviews from film critics. Due to its discussion of discrimination against women, Ten was banned in Iran. The film's two lead actresses have made calls for the distributor to stop screening it, over allegations of plagiarism and abuse by Kiarostami.

Plot Edit

The film is divided into ten scenes, each of which depict a conversation between an unchanging female driver (played by Mania Akbari) and a variety of passengers as she drives around Tehran.[3][4] Her passengers include her young son Amin (played by Akbari's real life child, Amina Maher[b]), her sister, a bride, a sex worker, and a woman on her way to prayer.

The first vignette of the film is a conversation between Amin and his mother, as he is being driven to the local pool. Over the course of their conversation, the driver raises her voice to him and tensions escalate as he yells over her. It is revealed that, due to the limited rights women are given the court system, the driver obtained a divorce from her ex-husband, by falsely telling the court he was a drug addict. After their conversation erupts into a fight, Amin abruptly exits the car.

The second vignette features the driver's sister who works as a teacher. They discuss the heavy burden and expectations children place on their parents. Both of their children have accused the women of not being good mothers. They eventually pick up a birthday cake for the driver's husband, Mortaza. The driver's sister advises her regarding Amin's rude behavior and tells her to let Amin live with his father, who will be able to "set him straight".

During the third vignette, the driver picks up a pious old woman who goes to the Mausoleum three times a day to pray. She reveals that her husband and 12-year-old son have both died. She goes to the Mausoleum to pray for them. She has sold her possessions in order to go on a pilgrimage to Syria and has given away her other possessions to people who are less fortunate than her. Their conversation ends as the driver drops the old woman off at the Mausoleum after she is unable to convince the driver to go in and pray herself.

The fourth vignette starts with a sex worker who mistakes the driver for a male client and gets into her car. The driver continues to drive around with the unnamed woman and persists in asking her personal questions. The sex worker, in turn, ends up lecturing the driver. She tells the driver that many of her clients are married men that get calls from their wives while they are with her. She admits to the driver that she feels bad for women who are idiotic enough to cling onto men and who actually believe that men are truthful. The sex worker was engaged to a man once until she realized she was "foolish". The conversation ends as she is dropped off and immediately picked up by a client.

The fifth vignette features a woman whose relation to the driver is unclear. The woman is picked up just after she has prayed at the Mausoleum. The two women discuss religion and whether or not they are believers. The passenger confesses that she had not been a believer in the past, and now she is not so sure. The passenger tells the driver that she was supposed to get married and she now prays at the Mausoleum with the hope that the man she is dating will propose soon.

In the next vignette, the driver picks up Amin from her ex-husband, who has been taking care of him. She and her ex-husband each stay in their cars, leaving Amin to cross a busy traffic-filled street. The driver asks permission to keep Amin overnight and he eventually agrees. Amin disagrees with his mother over a shortcut to his grandmother's house, but eventually realizes his mother is going the right way. Amin tells his mom that his father has been watching porn at home alone at night.

The driver next picks up her crying sister who is distraught over her husband leaving after 7 years together. As she cries, the driver tells her, "It is wrong to cling to him." The driver is reciting almost exactly what the sex worker had told her the night before. The driver is very frank and harsh with her sister. She tells her to toughen up and stop being so weak.

During the eighth vignette, the driver is with Amin again. She says a woman told her that Amin is a man and therefore needs to live and learn from a man. The driver agrees that Amin should go live with his father, and they have a conversation about her ex-husband finding a new wife. Amin says that his new wife would be better than his mother by obeying her husband, doing more housework, and coming home earlier. They disagree again over a shortcut and soon their argument escalates to the point where Amin abruptly gets out of the car again.

The ninth vignette features the same woman from the fifth vignette. She tells the driver that her boyfriend does not want to marry her, despite her hopes that he will. She feels jealous over the fact that he is thinking of another woman and that is what hurts her the most. The driver asks her passenger why her veil is so tight, and it is revealed that the passenger has shaved her head.

The final vignette is the shortest. The driver picks up Amin from his father. The film ends as the driver is taking him to his grandma's house.

Cast Edit

  • Mania Akbari as Driver
  • Amina Maher as Amin (as Amin Maher)
  • Kamran Adl
  • Roya Akbari as Prostitute + Lover (as Roya Arabshahi)
  • Roya Arabshahi
  • Amene Moradi
  • Mandana Sharbaf
  • Katayoun Taleizadeh

Production Edit

Kiarostami has characterized Ten as a fiction film, an account disputed by Akbari since 2020.[5] According to Kiarostami, the scenarios were originally written as psychologist conducting sessions out of her car while her office is being renovated. This premise was altered after it was deemed unworkable.[6] He stated in one interview that he used an earpiece under Akbari's veil to guide her in the conversations. He later explained that he only tried this technique once and found it unsuitable.[7]

In August 2020, Akbari accused Kiarostami of plagiarism, stating that Ten consisted of footage shot by her. According to Akbari, she recorded 120 hours of video for a personal project.[8][9] Akbari was not planning to use the content for a film, and she stated that "none of the women involved in the film ever received a single cent for their participation in 10."[5] Kiarostami told her he was interested in developing it into a script. Kiarostami shot three parts of the film: one with Kamran Adl as the boy's father and two where the sex worker and the religious woman exit the car. He shot additional footage that was not included in the film. He ultimately acted as editor on Ten, using Akbari's original footage, and showed her a final cut without any credits.[5] Kiarostami later recreated behind-the-scenes content after Ten's premiere.[9]

Adl confirmed that Kiarostami invited him to be in the film and shot his scenes. He responded that he believed Akbari's claims to be frivolous.[9] Amina Maher created the 2019 short film Letter to My Mother, in which she said that her scenes from Ten were filmed without her knowledge.[10][11] The end credits for Ten list the cast and crew's names without specifying their role on the film.[5]

Release Edit

 
Akbari (right) and Kiarostami (bottom) in 2004

Ten premiered on May 20, 2002, at the 55th Cannes Film Festival. Akbari went with Kiarostami to the premiere and later two additional screenings at the Institute of Contemporary Arts and the Thessaloniki International Film Festival. Because of her damaged relationship with Kiarostami, she stepped away from the press campaign after this.[5] The film was banned in Iran because of four sequences that were deemed unsuitable for public viewing, particularly around discussions of gender discrimination.[12]

Akbari and Maher asked distributor MK2 [fr] to halt circulation of the film but did not receive a response. When the British Film Institute scheduled Ten as part of a retrospective on Kiarostami's work, Akbari publicly shared their letters, which included allegations of plagiarism and abuse by Kiarostami. The BFI cancelled its screening, and Akbari said in an interview that she wants "to stop public screenings of 10."[5][13]

Reception and legacy Edit

The film received a positive response from contemporary film critics. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 85% of 53 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.30/10. The website's consensus reads: "Ten turns a conversational car ride into a gritty and compelling character study full of real emotion while providing an intriguing look into the lives of women in contemporary Iranian culture."[14]

For The New York Times, A. O. Scott wrote that "Kiarostami understands the automobile as a place for reflection, observation and, above all, talk."[15] In a review for the Los Angeles Times, Manohla Dargis called the film a "conceptual tour de force and a brainiac's road movie".[16] Roger Ebert was critical of how Ten presented its themes, writing that "to praise the film for this is like praising a child for coloring between the lines."[17] J. Hoberman of The Village Voice described the film as "conceptually rigorous, splendidly economical, and radically Bazinian."[18]

Ten ranks at 447th place on Empire magazine's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time and 47th in "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" list in 2010.[19][20] The French film magazine Cahiers du cinéma ranked the film 10th in its list of best films of 2000–2009.[21] The film was later voted the 98th greatest film since 2000 in an international critics' poll conducted by BBC.[22]

In 2019, The Guardian ranked Ten 76th in its 100 Best Films of the 21st Century list.[23]

Kiarostami and Akbari each produced follow-ups to the film. Kiarostami's 2004 10 on Ten is a 10-part exploration of the process of making Ten.[24] Akbari's 2007 10+4, made while Akbari was being treated for breast cancer, serves as a sequel to Ten.[25] Ten was also a major influence on Jafar Panahi's 2015 film Taxi.[26]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The film's credits have been disputed by Akbari; see § Production.
  2. ^ a b Credited as Amin Maher; Maher is transgender and changed her name in 2019.

References Edit

  1. ^ Ten – review by Peter Bradshaw at The Guardian, September 27, 2002
  2. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Ten". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
  3. ^ Driving Affect: The car and Kiarostami's Ten – article by Nicholas Balaisis at York University
  4. ^ Abbas Kiarostami's Ten - Reinventing the Road Movie – review by David Parkinson at Moviemail, June 26, 2013
  5. ^ a b c d e f Edemen, Fatma (25 July 2022). "Mania Akbari Tells Her Own Story". Altyazı Fasikül. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  6. ^ Caputo, Rolando (December 2003). "Five to Ten: Five Reflections on Abbas Kiarostami's 10". Senses of Cinema. Vol. 29. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  7. ^ Andrew, Geoff (2005). 10. British Film Institute.
  8. ^ "آیا عباس کیارستمی فیلم "ده" را نساخت؟!". Tabnak (in Persian). 31 August 2020. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Rashidan, Masoumeh (10 September 2020). "واکنش کامران عدل به ادعاها علیه کیارستمی: مهمل است". Ensaf News (in Persian). Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  10. ^ Martin, Rebecca (28 February 2021). "Amina Maher's 'Letter to My Mother' is a courageous and unflinching self-portrait". Cinema Femme. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  11. ^ "Letter to my mother". Cinematic Perception. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  12. ^ Havis, Richard James (20 January 2017). . South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 20 January 2017. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  13. ^ Venardou, Evanna (20 June 2022). Η σκηνοθέτρια Μάνια Ακμπάρι κατηγορεί τον Αμπάς Κιαροστάμι για βιασμό και λογοκλοπή. LiFO (in Greek). Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  14. ^ "Ten". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 25 July 2022.  
  15. ^ Scott, A. O. (28 September 2002). "In Tehran, a Driver With a Lot to Say". The New York Times. p. B14. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  16. ^ Dargis, Manohla (25 April 2003). "Worlds apart". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  17. ^ Ebert, Roger (11 April 2003). "Ten". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  18. ^ Hoberman, J. (4 March 2003). "Formal Attire". The Village Voice. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  19. ^ "The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time #447: Ten (2002)". Empire. Retrieved 2009-04-06.
  20. ^ "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema". Empire.
  21. ^ Cahiers du cinéma #652, January 2010. . Archived from the original on 2013-11-04. Retrieved 2013-12-27.
  22. ^ "The 21st century's 100 greatest films". BBC. August 23, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2017.
  23. ^ "The 100 best films of the 21st century". The Guardian. 13 September 2019. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
  24. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan (29 October 2004). "Kiarostami at Work [10 on TEN]". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  25. ^ Seymour, Tom (15 July 2013). "Iranian film-maker Mania Akbari: 'Cinema threatens the government'". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  26. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (4 July 2016). "Abbas Kiarostami: sophisticated, self-possessed master of cinematic poetry". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 July 2022.

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

2002, film, persian, ده, appears, during, opening, credits, 2002, iranian, docufiction, film, starring, mania, akbari, amina, maher, tendirected, byabbas, kiarostami, produced, bymarin, karmitzabbas, kiarostamistarringmania, akbariamina, maher, cinematographya. Ten Persian ده appears as 10 during the opening credits is a 2002 Iranian docufiction film starring Mania Akbari and Amina Maher 1 TenDirected byAbbas Kiarostami a Produced byMarin KarmitzAbbas KiarostamiStarringMania AkbariAmina Maher b CinematographyAbbas KiarostamiEdited byAbbas KiarostamiVahid GhaziBahman KiarostamiMusic byHoward BlakeRelease dateMay 20 2002 2002 05 20 Cannes Film Festival Running time89 minutesCountryIranLanguagePersianThe film premiered May 20 2002 at the 55th Cannes Film Festival where it was nominated for the Palme d Or 2 It received positive reviews from film critics Due to its discussion of discrimination against women Ten was banned in Iran The film s two lead actresses have made calls for the distributor to stop screening it over allegations of plagiarism and abuse by Kiarostami Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 5 Reception and legacy 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPlot EditThe film is divided into ten scenes each of which depict a conversation between an unchanging female driver played by Mania Akbari and a variety of passengers as she drives around Tehran 3 4 Her passengers include her young son Amin played by Akbari s real life child Amina Maher b her sister a bride a sex worker and a woman on her way to prayer The first vignette of the film is a conversation between Amin and his mother as he is being driven to the local pool Over the course of their conversation the driver raises her voice to him and tensions escalate as he yells over her It is revealed that due to the limited rights women are given the court system the driver obtained a divorce from her ex husband by falsely telling the court he was a drug addict After their conversation erupts into a fight Amin abruptly exits the car The second vignette features the driver s sister who works as a teacher They discuss the heavy burden and expectations children place on their parents Both of their children have accused the women of not being good mothers They eventually pick up a birthday cake for the driver s husband Mortaza The driver s sister advises her regarding Amin s rude behavior and tells her to let Amin live with his father who will be able to set him straight During the third vignette the driver picks up a pious old woman who goes to the Mausoleum three times a day to pray She reveals that her husband and 12 year old son have both died She goes to the Mausoleum to pray for them She has sold her possessions in order to go on a pilgrimage to Syria and has given away her other possessions to people who are less fortunate than her Their conversation ends as the driver drops the old woman off at the Mausoleum after she is unable to convince the driver to go in and pray herself The fourth vignette starts with a sex worker who mistakes the driver for a male client and gets into her car The driver continues to drive around with the unnamed woman and persists in asking her personal questions The sex worker in turn ends up lecturing the driver She tells the driver that many of her clients are married men that get calls from their wives while they are with her She admits to the driver that she feels bad for women who are idiotic enough to cling onto men and who actually believe that men are truthful The sex worker was engaged to a man once until she realized she was foolish The conversation ends as she is dropped off and immediately picked up by a client The fifth vignette features a woman whose relation to the driver is unclear The woman is picked up just after she has prayed at the Mausoleum The two women discuss religion and whether or not they are believers The passenger confesses that she had not been a believer in the past and now she is not so sure The passenger tells the driver that she was supposed to get married and she now prays at the Mausoleum with the hope that the man she is dating will propose soon In the next vignette the driver picks up Amin from her ex husband who has been taking care of him She and her ex husband each stay in their cars leaving Amin to cross a busy traffic filled street The driver asks permission to keep Amin overnight and he eventually agrees Amin disagrees with his mother over a shortcut to his grandmother s house but eventually realizes his mother is going the right way Amin tells his mom that his father has been watching porn at home alone at night The driver next picks up her crying sister who is distraught over her husband leaving after 7 years together As she cries the driver tells her It is wrong to cling to him The driver is reciting almost exactly what the sex worker had told her the night before The driver is very frank and harsh with her sister She tells her to toughen up and stop being so weak During the eighth vignette the driver is with Amin again She says a woman told her that Amin is a man and therefore needs to live and learn from a man The driver agrees that Amin should go live with his father and they have a conversation about her ex husband finding a new wife Amin says that his new wife would be better than his mother by obeying her husband doing more housework and coming home earlier They disagree again over a shortcut and soon their argument escalates to the point where Amin abruptly gets out of the car again The ninth vignette features the same woman from the fifth vignette She tells the driver that her boyfriend does not want to marry her despite her hopes that he will She feels jealous over the fact that he is thinking of another woman and that is what hurts her the most The driver asks her passenger why her veil is so tight and it is revealed that the passenger has shaved her head The final vignette is the shortest The driver picks up Amin from his father The film ends as the driver is taking him to his grandma s house Cast EditMania Akbari as Driver Amina Maher as Amin as Amin Maher Kamran Adl Roya Akbari as Prostitute Lover as Roya Arabshahi Roya Arabshahi Amene Moradi Mandana Sharbaf Katayoun TaleizadehProduction EditKiarostami has characterized Ten as a fiction film an account disputed by Akbari since 2020 5 According to Kiarostami the scenarios were originally written as psychologist conducting sessions out of her car while her office is being renovated This premise was altered after it was deemed unworkable 6 He stated in one interview that he used an earpiece under Akbari s veil to guide her in the conversations He later explained that he only tried this technique once and found it unsuitable 7 In August 2020 Akbari accused Kiarostami of plagiarism stating that Ten consisted of footage shot by her According to Akbari she recorded 120 hours of video for a personal project 8 9 Akbari was not planning to use the content for a film and she stated that none of the women involved in the film ever received a single cent for their participation in 10 5 Kiarostami told her he was interested in developing it into a script Kiarostami shot three parts of the film one with Kamran Adl as the boy s father and two where the sex worker and the religious woman exit the car He shot additional footage that was not included in the film He ultimately acted as editor on Ten using Akbari s original footage and showed her a final cut without any credits 5 Kiarostami later recreated behind the scenes content after Ten s premiere 9 Adl confirmed that Kiarostami invited him to be in the film and shot his scenes He responded that he believed Akbari s claims to be frivolous 9 Amina Maher created the 2019 short film Letter to My Mother in which she said that her scenes from Ten were filmed without her knowledge 10 11 The end credits for Ten list the cast and crew s names without specifying their role on the film 5 Release Edit nbsp Akbari right and Kiarostami bottom in 2004Ten premiered on May 20 2002 at the 55th Cannes Film Festival Akbari went with Kiarostami to the premiere and later two additional screenings at the Institute of Contemporary Arts and the Thessaloniki International Film Festival Because of her damaged relationship with Kiarostami she stepped away from the press campaign after this 5 The film was banned in Iran because of four sequences that were deemed unsuitable for public viewing particularly around discussions of gender discrimination 12 Akbari and Maher asked distributor MK2 fr to halt circulation of the film but did not receive a response When the British Film Institute scheduled Ten as part of a retrospective on Kiarostami s work Akbari publicly shared their letters which included allegations of plagiarism and abuse by Kiarostami The BFI cancelled its screening and Akbari said in an interview that she wants to stop public screenings of 10 5 13 Reception and legacy EditThe film received a positive response from contemporary film critics On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes 85 of 53 critics reviews are positive with an average rating of 7 30 10 The website s consensus reads Ten turns a conversational car ride into a gritty and compelling character study full of real emotion while providing an intriguing look into the lives of women in contemporary Iranian culture 14 For The New York Times A O Scott wrote that Kiarostami understands the automobile as a place for reflection observation and above all talk 15 In a review for the Los Angeles Times Manohla Dargis called the film a conceptual tour de force and a brainiac s road movie 16 Roger Ebert was critical of how Ten presented its themes writing that to praise the film for this is like praising a child for coloring between the lines 17 J Hoberman of The Village Voice described the film as conceptually rigorous splendidly economical and radically Bazinian 18 Ten ranks at 447th place on Empire magazine s 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time and 47th in The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema list in 2010 19 20 The French film magazine Cahiers du cinema ranked the film 10th in its list of best films of 2000 2009 21 The film was later voted the 98th greatest film since 2000 in an international critics poll conducted by BBC 22 In 2019 The Guardian ranked Ten 76th in its 100 Best Films of the 21st Century list 23 Kiarostami and Akbari each produced follow ups to the film Kiarostami s 2004 10 on Ten is a 10 part exploration of the process of making Ten 24 Akbari s 2007 10 4 made while Akbari was being treated for breast cancer serves as a sequel to Ten 25 Ten was also a major influence on Jafar Panahi s 2015 film Taxi 26 Notes Edit The film s credits have been disputed by Akbari see Production a b Credited as Amin Maher Maher is transgender and changed her name in 2019 References Edit Ten review by Peter Bradshaw at The Guardian September 27 2002 Festival de Cannes Ten festival cannes com Retrieved 2009 10 25 Driving Affect The car and Kiarostami s Ten article by Nicholas Balaisis at York University Abbas Kiarostami s Ten Reinventing the Road Movie review by David Parkinson at Moviemail June 26 2013 a b c d e f Edemen Fatma 25 July 2022 Mania Akbari Tells Her Own Story Altyazi Fasikul Retrieved 25 July 2022 Caputo Rolando December 2003 Five to Ten Five Reflections on Abbas Kiarostami s 10 Senses of Cinema Vol 29 Retrieved 25 July 2022 Andrew Geoff 2005 10 British Film Institute آیا عباس کیارستمی فیلم ده را نساخت Tabnak in Persian 31 August 2020 Retrieved 21 June 2022 a b c Rashidan Masoumeh 10 September 2020 واکنش کامران عدل به ادعاها علیه کیارستمی مهمل است Ensaf News in Persian Retrieved 21 June 2022 Martin Rebecca 28 February 2021 Amina Maher s Letter to My Mother is a courageous and unflinching self portrait Cinema Femme Retrieved 21 June 2022 Letter to my mother Cinematic Perception Retrieved 21 June 2022 Havis Richard James 20 January 2017 Flashback Ten 2002 Abbas Kiarostami s experimental road movie gives voice to Iranian women South China Morning Post Archived from the original on 20 January 2017 Retrieved 25 July 2022 Venardou Evanna 20 June 2022 H skhno8etria Mania Akmpari kathgorei ton Ampas Kiarostami gia biasmo kai logokloph LiFO in Greek Retrieved 21 June 2022 Ten Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved 25 July 2022 nbsp Scott A O 28 September 2002 In Tehran a Driver With a Lot to Say The New York Times p B14 Retrieved 25 July 2022 Dargis Manohla 25 April 2003 Worlds apart Los Angeles Times Retrieved 25 July 2022 Ebert Roger 11 April 2003 Ten RogerEbert com Retrieved 25 July 2022 Hoberman J 4 March 2003 Formal Attire The Village Voice Retrieved 25 July 2022 The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time 447 Ten 2002 Empire Retrieved 2009 04 06 The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema Empire Cahiers du cinema 652 January 2010 PALMARES 2000 Cahiers du Cinema Archived from the original on 2013 11 04 Retrieved 2013 12 27 The 21st century s 100 greatest films BBC August 23 2016 Retrieved January 26 2017 The 100 best films of the 21st century The Guardian 13 September 2019 Retrieved 17 September 2019 Rosenbaum Jonathan 29 October 2004 Kiarostami at Work 10 on TEN Chicago Reader Retrieved 25 July 2022 Seymour Tom 15 July 2013 Iranian film maker Mania Akbari Cinema threatens the government The Guardian Retrieved 25 July 2022 Bradshaw Peter 4 July 2016 Abbas Kiarostami sophisticated self possessed master of cinematic poetry The Guardian Retrieved 25 July 2022 Further reading EditAndrew Geoff 10 London British Film Institute 2005 Copjec Joan May 2016 Cinema as thought experiment on movement and movements Differences A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies Duke University Press 27 1 143 175 doi 10 1215 10407391 3522781 External links EditTen at IMDb Ten at AllMovie Ten at the TCM Movie Database Ten at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ten 2002 film amp oldid 1178013327, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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