Sarina farhadi biography templates
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Film Review: A Separation (2011) by Asghar Farhadi
on Amazon
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On-Air Album Review: Ruin But a Sandwich be pleased about ‘A Hero’
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Write Angles
by Adam Nayman
A Separation
Dir. Asghar Farhadi, Iran, Sony Pictures Classics
“It’s a screenwriter’s film,” said a friend of Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation, a designation that is at once accurate and dismissive, on the nose and besides the point. Yes, the film, which won the Golden Bear in Berlin and received excellent reviews at the Toronto International Film Festival before its selection at NYFF, is extremely well-written, but the idea that its writerly qualities should preclude its recognition as vital cinema strikes me as pretty reductive. The film is superbly written, but it's also smartly directed, insofar as there’s a continuity between its writer-director’s ideas and the visual language he uses to express them.
Take, for example, Farhadi’s staging of the first scene, which simultaneously anticipates other key sequences in the film while also standing alone, bracketed off from the rest of the action. We get a two-shot of the film’s major characters, Naader (Peyman Moaadi), a prosperous Tehranian bank teller in his mid-thirties, and his wife, Simin (Leila Hatami), seated side by side against a white wall. This beginning is an ending, of sorts: the couple is in front of a judge and trying to get a divorce. During this static, uninterrupted
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Asghar Farhadi
Iranian film director and screenwriter (born 1972)
Asghar Farhadi (Persian: اصغر فرهادی, [æsˈɢæɾɛfæɾhɑːˈdiː]ⓘ; born 7 May 1972)[1] is an Iranian film director and screenwriter. He is considered one of the most prominent filmmakers of Iranian cinema as well as world cinema in the 21st century. His films have gained recognition for their focus on the human condition, and portrayals of intimate and challenging stories of internal family conflicts. In 2012, he was included on the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world.[2] That same year, he also received the Legion of Honour from France.
Farhadi made his directorial film debut with the dramaDancing in the Dust (2003), followed by The Beautiful City (2004) and Fireworks Wednesday (2006). He gained acclaim for his film About Elly (2009) earning a Silver Bear for Best Director. He became one of the few directors worldwide to have won the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film twice, for the family drama A Separation (2011) and the moral drama The Salesman (2016), the latter of which also received the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Screenplay.
He also gained acclaim for his films The Past (2013), which was filmed in France,