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“Afto”: An issue beyond characterization

Mohsen Saraji | Director of Creativity and Future Research

Mr. Qasem Khani’s penalty foul…!

Afto’s character is an example that shows that “instant popularity” does not necessarily equal “lasting identity.” At first glance, Afto tries to represent the new generation; energetic, bold, and engaged in everyday challenges. But the problem begins precisely here:

Afto is more of a reaction than a narrative.

There are three basic axes for analyzing enduring characters – whether local or international –:

Universality

Behavioral continuity

A specific internal motivation

And Afto has a big gap in all three axes.

Incomplete universality

The character is formed in a vacuum and his surrounding world is not defined. We do not know what value system he lives in or what conflicts shape him. The result: Afto cannot be developed.

Shallow behavioral continuity

The reactions, jokes, and sharp tone are noticeable, but the behaviors do not follow a character logic. Today Aftu is emotional, tomorrow critical, and the day after tomorrow merely a tool for repetitive modeling. This instability reduces the audience’s trust.

Narrative unmotivation

If you ask a child, “What does Aftu want?” there is probably no answer. A character becomes meaningful when he has wants, needs, and conflicts. Without them, the character is simply a voice, an image, or a joke.

An obscure but important point

There are suspicions that Qasemkhani does not respect the character’s intellectual rights.

In more hidden layers, Aftu sometimes behaves like another design; It seems to have been shaped under the influence of an external template that was not designed by its original creator and lacks an independent identity. This influence has not led to "creative adaptation" or "Iranian re-creation."

The result: no distinctive morality has been formed, no character, no subtle features that give the character a soul.

In simple terms:

The character changes but does not evolve; it moves but does not have a destination; and it has an identity but still does not have morality.

The importance of the Afto critique

In the age of characters, characters can build a brand, influence society, and have a real presence in the media, economy, and culture. When a popular but shallow character is created, not only does it not last, but the audience's expectations of character development also fall.

Afto could have been an opportunity to create a generational character with tensions, pain, dreams, and intelligent humor.

But for now, it's a sign: characters who have more "reactions" than "stories."