For us Iranians, that aspect of a film like Tabib is more relevant to the nationality, history and culture of our country. Until now, in the case of films such as Omar Khayyam's Heir, Argo, Without My Daughter Never, Three Hundred, etc., each of which in some way included some aspects of being Iranian, the biggest reactions have been that little And how true or false the bag of reflections of these works from Iran has been, which, of course, has often been severely ridiculed for its obvious distortions in the manifestations of history, culture, lifestyle, and so on. As for the doctor's film, a long list of gross mistakes can be made, in which the facts about Iran and Iranians are distorted. Contrary to the physician's claim, Ibn Sina did not commit suicide, he died not in Isfahan but in Hamedan. At the time of Ibn Sina, the religious minorities approved by Islam were not subject to deadly strictures. In order for the side to move ahead of Ibn Sina and teach him the right way to dissect the body and know the science of anatomy and how to control the plague!), The Seljuk invasion of Isfahan took place several decades after Ibn Sina's death, Sinai was never sentenced to death (only for a while he was imprisoned in Hamedan for political reasons by the order of the then ruler of Al-Buwayh), the opposition of the legislators to Ibn. Cena was not killed in the war with the Seljuks because of his philosophical beliefs and not because of his medical activities, and ... these are just some of the examples of the work's inconsistencies with historical and cultural facts.
I am Iranian, the oldest civilization in the world💪🏼🇮🇷