Film

Iran's Farhadi threatens not to represent Iran at Oscars

The director, who won two Academy Awards for best foreign-language film in 2011 and 2017, aired his grievances on the ruling government

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 22 Nov 2021 10:00AM

Iran's Farhadi threatens not to represent Iran at Oscars
Iranian director Asghar Farhadi speaks during a press conference for the film Ghahreman (A Hero) at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, on July 14. – AFP pic, November 22, 2021

IRANIAN double Oscar winning film director Asghar Farhadi has launched a scathing attack on Tehran authorities and threatened not to represent Iran at the next edition of the prestigious awards ceremony.

"How can I be associated... with a government whose extremist media have not stopped these past years from destroying me, marginalising me, stigmatising me?" he asked on his Instagram page.

Farhadi, who divides his time between Iran and abroad, shot his last movie, A Hero, a drama about a prisoner, in the Iranian city of Shiraz.

"I have explicitly expressed my point of view on the suffering (the state) has imposed for years on the nation," he said, referring to the repression of demonstrations in January 2017 and November 2019, and the "cruel discrimination" against women and the government's handling of the Covid-19 pandemic.

"If Iran's submission of my film at the Oscars led people to think that I'm under your flag, I state explicitly that it is no problem for me to scrap this decision," he wrote, ruling out any ambiguity on his stand.

"I have never felt the least affinity with your attitude and retrograde thinking, (even though) I've never spoken until now of the persecution you've made me suffer," said Farhadi, addressing authorities.

"You've confiscated my passport at the airport several times and organised interrogation sessions," he said in the comments posted last week.

Farhadi's 2011 film The Separation won both an Oscar and Golden Globe as best foreign-language movie. In 2017, he won a second foreign-language Oscar with his work The Salesman.

Iranian newspapers have aired mixed reactions to his open letter.

"Awards at festivals and foreign investments have apparently changed Farhadi (by encouraging him) to give a gloomy and dirty image of Iran," wrote the ultraconservative daily Kayhan.

Pro-reform newspaper Shargh defended the film-maker.

"Farhadi's image corresponds neither to those who praise him nor to his critics in Iran, and he has always expressed clearly his positions on socio-political questions," Shargh said.

The director's latest film, A Hero, is scheduled for release in US movie theatres in January, followed the same month by streaming on Amazon Prime. – AFP, November 22, 2021

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