Through The Olive Trees- Abbas Kiarostami Jun 2026
The director (Kiarostami, essentially playing himself) calls "Cut." The film-within-a-film is over. The crew packs up. Hossein, realizing this is his absolute last chance, breaks the fictional frame. He chases after Tahereh as she walks away, across the rolling hills of northern Iran, zigzagging through the endless rows of olive trees.
This scene is a treatise on the ethics of representation. Kiarostami forces us to ask: Where is the real truth? Is it in the scripted line, or in the refusal to say it? Is Tahereh a bad actress, or is she the most authentic person in the frame? By refusing to perform intimacy, she becomes more real to us than any professional actor could be. Kiarostami loves his non-professional actors because they carry the weight of their lives, their traumas, and their biases into the frame. You cannot direct that out of them. You can only film the gap between the script and the soul. Through the olive trees- Abbas Kiarostami