Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami dies at 76

His film "Taste of Cherry" won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival

Abbas Kiarostami (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Abbas Kiarostami (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
IANS Paris
Last Updated : Jul 05 2016 | 11:33 AM IST
Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami, whose 1997 film "Taste of Cherry" won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, is dead. He was 76.

Iran's Isna news agency confirmed his death, reports variety.com.

Kiarostami, who died here, had been receiving treatment for gastrointestinal cancer and had travelled to France for a series of operations.

Often applying a non-narrative and experimental approach, the poetic and highly visual filmmaker was revered by cineastes around the world.

Born in Tehran, he started the film department at Kanun, Iran's Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults. He made his first film, "Bread and Alley" while running the institute.

Kiarostami stayed in Iran after the revolution, while other filmmakers of the Iranian New Wave left the country to seek more creative freedom. The 1990 "Close-Up," which mixes fact and fiction and jumbles chronology, is considered to be one of his masterpieces.

He first made an impression outside his home country with the Koker trilogy including "Where is the Friend's Home?," "Life, and Nothing More?" and "Through the Olive Trees." He also wrote and produced Jafar Panahi's directing debut "The White Balloon." "Taste of Cherry" was his seventh feature and shared the Cannes prize with Shohei Imamura's "The Eel."

His 1999 "The Wind Will Carry Us" incorporated more humour, but continued his elliptical, poetic approach.

After political challenges drove him to work outside of Iran, he made "Certified Copy" in Italy, starring Juliette Binoche, who won best actress at Cannes for her role.

His last full-length feature, 2012's "Like Someone in Love," was made in Japan and screened in official competition in Cannes.

Kiarostami and his films had a special relationship with the Busan festival in South Korea. He first appeared in Busan in 1997 with "Like Summer." He returned repeatedly with other titles including "The Taste of Cherry," "The Wind Will Carry Us," and "ABC Africa." He was president of the festival's main competition jury in 2005 and was a founding faculty member of Busan's proposed Asian Film Academy.

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First Published: Jul 05 2016 | 11:04 AM IST

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