Through The Olive Trees- Abbas Kiarostami -
💡 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.
The setting is a landscape of dualities. On one side of the frame, you see the jagged, grey scars of collapsed concrete and shattered brick. On the other, you see the impossibly green, rolling hills of the Caspian coast, punctuated by ancient olive groves. This visual paradox is not accidental. Kiarostami is suggesting that life—and art—exists in the liminal space between utter devastation and serene beauty. The earthquake has leveled houses, but it cannot uproot the trees, nor the stubborn rituals of courtship. Through the olive trees- Abbas Kiarostami
The film tells the story of a young man, Hossain (played by Mohsen Namjoo), who falls in love with a woman, Shirin (played by Puya Takavar), while engaged to be married to another. As Hossain struggles to come to terms with his feelings, Kiarostami masterfully weaves a narrative that blurs the lines between reality and fiction. The film's use of non-professional actors and a loose, improvisational style adds to its sense of authenticity, making the characters' emotions feel all the more genuine. 💡 Through the Olive Trees is the ultimate
Abbas Kiarostami’s (1994) is a masterpiece of "meta-cinema" that concludes his celebrated Koker Trilogy . The film is celebrated for its deceptive simplicity, blending fiction with documentary-style realism to explore the human spirit in the wake of tragedy. 🎬 The Core Premise: Cinema within Cinema On one side of the frame, you see