Jon Stewart goes out of his way to prove that he has a serious side, without losing his sense of humor, with his directorial debut Rosewater (Open Road). Based on the memoir by Iranian journalist Maziar Bahari, Rosewater is a timely story of paranoia, freedom of expression and religious fanaticism.
Following his coverage of the 2009 Iranian presidential elections in Tehran, including an interview he did with hot Daily Show correspondent Jason Jones, Bahari (Gael Garcia Bernal) is arrested at the home of his mother Moloojoon (Shohreh Aghdashloo) and subsequently imprisoned, interrogated and tortured for 100 days. The son of a deceased communist, Akbar (Haluk Bilginer), who was imprisoned during the reign of the Shah (and whose "ghost" visits and strengthens Bahari during his own imprisonment), and the brother of Maryam (Golshifteh Farahani), who was similarly jailed by the Khomeini regime, Bahari and his mother are accustomed to this kind of mistreatment.
Bahari's torturer Rosewater (Kim Bodnia), who regularly sprays himself with the titular scent, is determined to get some sort of confession out of Bahari, a man who doesn't really have anything to confess. Using the limited tools at his disposal, including threats regarding long-suffering Moloojoon and Bahari's pregnant wife Paola (Claire Foy) in London, Rosewater is as much under the gun as Bahari.
Bahari sees the humor in the senselessness of some of the torture and interrogation tactics, and thankfully, so do we. With Rosewater, Stewart has found a way to make a political statement in line with his style of social commentary.