Oscar-winning Iranian director Farhadi calls crackdown, war deaths 'deeply painful'
Asghar Farhadi, director of the first Iranian film to win the Oscar for best foreign language movie, on Friday described as deeply painful the deaths of thousands of people in a January crackdown on protesters and the ongoing war affecting Iran.
Miranda Murray/REUTERS
17 May 2026 at 07:49:18

Director Asghar Farhadi (fourth from right), cast members Vincent Cassel, Virginie Efira, Isabelle Huppert, Catherine Deneuve, Pierre Niney, and Adam Bessa, pose on the red carpet as they leave following the screening of the film "Histoires paralleles" (Parallel Tales) in competition at the 79th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 14, 2026. REUTERS/Marko Djurica
REUTERS/Marko Djurica
CANNES, France- Asghar Farhadi, director of the first Iranian film to win the Oscar for best foreign language movie, on Friday described as deeply painful the deaths of thousands of people in a January crackdown on protesters and the ongoing war affecting Iran.
"I was actually in Tehran last week, and I am still carrying the impact of these events with me," the two-time Oscar-winning director told journalists at the Cannes Film Festival, where his film "Parallel Tales" premiered the night before.
"Both are deeply painful, and neither will ever be forgotten."
In January, anti-government protests across Iran were quashed in the biggest crackdown in the Islamic Republic's history. At the end of February, U.S. and Israeli airstrikes launched a war against Iran that has drawn in the broader Middle East.
Farhadi, who has been based largely outside Iran since 2023, added that it was painful to read news about innocent people being killed every day.
Farhadi's "A Separation" became the first Iranian movie to win the Oscar for best foreign language film in 2012. He won the same Oscar five years later with "The Salesman," though he boycotted the ceremony in protest against the travel ban affecting several Muslim-majority countries during U.S. President Donald Trump's first presidential term.
"Parallel Tales," a drama set in Paris featuring French-language stars Isabelle Huppert and Vincent Cassel, is in competition for the festival's top prize against 21 other films.
(Reporting by Miranda Murray; editing by Barbara Lewis)
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