Through The Olive Trees- Abbas Kiarostami Upd ✦ Free Forever
One of Kiarostami’s most charming innovations is the portrayal of the film director (played by Mohamad Ali Keshavarz). This is not the auteur-as-tyrant stereotype. Instead, he is a tired, pragmatic mediator. He doesn’t care about Hossein’s romantic obsession; he cares about getting the shot.
💡 Through the Olive Trees is the ultimate tribute to the persistence of the human spirit. Kiarostami shows us that even in the face of natural disasters and strict social divides, human connection and hope will always find a way to bloom. Through the olive trees- Abbas Kiarostami
The story centers on (played by Hossein Rezai), a local mason-turned-actor, and Tahereh (Tahereh Ladanian), his co-star. In the world of the film, they are playing a married couple. However, in "real life" on the set, Hossein is deeply in love with Tahereh and has been repeatedly rejected by her family because he is poor and illiterate. The Koker Trilogy: Journeys of the Heart | Current One of Kiarostami’s most charming innovations is the
: A meta-narrative that takes place "behind the scenes" of a single scene from And Life Goes On 2. Plot Summary He doesn’t care about Hossein’s romantic obsession; he
In the pantheon of world cinema, few filmmakers have blurred the line between documentary and fiction with the philosophical rigor of Abbas Kiarostami. As the leading light of the Iranian New Wave, Kiarostami constructed films that were not merely stories but meditations on the very nature of storytelling. While his 1997 masterpiece Taste of Cherry won the Palme d’Or, it is the final film of his informal “Koker Trilogy”— Through the Olive Trees (1994)—that serves as the most breathtaking and vertiginous essay on the relationship between art, reality, and obsession.
The narrative evolution of the trilogy is unique in film history: