The Prague Post - Dissident Iranian filmmaker Panahi wins top prize at Cannes

EUR -
AED 4.230647
AFN 76.931671
ALL 96.697801
AMD 442.492655
ANG 2.062108
AOA 1056.366648
ARS 1620.843762
AUD 1.777528
AWG 2.075005
AZN 1.960295
BAM 1.955343
BBD 2.333044
BDT 141.667477
BGN 1.955949
BHD 0.434347
BIF 3419.044095
BMD 1.151981
BND 1.510389
BOB 8.004128
BRL 6.141907
BSD 1.158324
BTN 102.516131
BWP 16.457222
BYN 3.955358
BYR 22578.818588
BZD 2.329745
CAD 1.619379
CDF 2563.157006
CHF 0.929299
CLF 0.027368
CLP 1073.645812
CNY 8.188302
CNH 8.199152
COP 4271.543843
CRC 579.366995
CUC 1.151981
CUP 30.527484
CVE 110.239214
CZK 24.162328
DJF 206.270856
DKK 7.468618
DOP 73.793059
DZD 150.550486
EGP 54.592015
ERN 17.279708
ETB 179.289284
FJD 2.637402
FKP 0.876089
GBP 0.882135
GEL 3.113933
GGP 0.876089
GHS 12.765014
GIP 0.876089
GMD 84.673687
GNF 10060.559402
GTQ 8.872848
GYD 242.253335
HKD 8.966469
HNL 30.482737
HRK 7.535214
HTG 151.619399
HUF 381.624696
IDR 19274.938399
ILS 3.756641
IMP 0.876089
INR 102.18286
IQD 1517.445054
IRR 48527.179544
ISK 146.797002
JEP 0.876089
JMD 186.107275
JOD 0.816747
JPY 181.469157
KES 149.75726
KGS 100.740658
KHR 4636.452639
KMF 491.895758
KPW 1036.802435
KRW 1692.351512
KWD 0.354062
KYD 0.965274
KZT 600.779472
LAK 25140.119474
LBP 103145.123822
LKR 357.066479
LRD 209.079279
LSL 19.872365
LTL 3.401499
LVL 0.696821
LYD 6.318495
MAD 10.717293
MDL 19.703306
MGA 5195.8072
MKD 61.510612
MMK 2418.348914
MNT 4113.325607
MOP 9.290527
MRU 45.987443
MUR 53.267536
MVR 17.752038
MWK 2008.638877
MXN 21.133102
MYR 4.798578
MZN 73.626677
NAD 19.872452
NGN 1681.665869
NIO 42.629288
NOK 11.738313
NPR 164.026921
NZD 2.054339
OMR 0.442937
PAB 1.158329
PEN 3.906703
PGK 4.900832
PHP 68.012356
PKR 327.355849
PLN 4.226047
PYG 8157.056578
QAR 4.222976
RON 5.087955
RSD 117.270726
RUB 92.792396
RWF 1684.313333
SAR 4.32034
SBD 9.481482
SCR 17.482369
SDG 692.916373
SEK 11.003372
SGD 1.506514
SHP 0.864284
SLE 26.927554
SLL 24156.453795
SOS 660.848289
SRD 44.439381
STD 23843.671343
STN 24.494058
SVC 10.135629
SYP 12737.475551
SZL 19.868439
THB 37.392116
TJS 10.697405
TMT 4.031932
TND 3.415371
TOP 2.773693
TRY 48.805574
TTD 7.856162
TWD 35.975205
TZS 2805.072228
UAH 48.763405
UGX 4234.009623
USD 1.151981
UYU 46.12921
UZS 13831.824633
VES 273.541592
VND 30387.51868
VUV 140.727445
WST 3.245077
XAF 655.806447
XAG 0.022446
XAU 0.000283
XCD 3.113285
XCG 2.087712
XDR 0.815613
XOF 655.800755
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.748955
ZAR 19.809686
ZMK 10369.19126
ZMW 26.323728
ZWL 370.937264
  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    13.79

    -1.23%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    15.73

    +0.45%

  • RBGPF

    1.9500

    79.04

    +2.47%

  • AZN

    -0.5600

    88.99

    -0.63%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    23.67

    +0.34%

  • NGG

    -1.4400

    76.09

    -1.89%

  • VOD

    -0.2400

    12.01

    -2%

  • GSK

    -1.0300

    46.34

    -2.22%

  • BCC

    1.1500

    67.22

    +1.71%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    69.43

    -0.45%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    22.79

    -1.01%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.25

    -0.15%

  • CMSD

    -0.1170

    23.753

    -0.49%

  • RELX

    -0.4700

    39.8

    -1.18%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    54.74

    -0.22%

  • BP

    -0.7400

    35.95

    -2.06%

Dissident Iranian filmmaker Panahi wins top prize at Cannes
Dissident Iranian filmmaker Panahi wins top prize at Cannes / Photo: Valery HACHE - AFP

Dissident Iranian filmmaker Panahi wins top prize at Cannes

"It Was Just an Accident" by dissident Iranian director Jafar Panahi won the Palme d'Or for best film at the Cannes Festival on Saturday.

Text size:

The highly political but wry film tells the tale of five ordinary Iranians confronted with a man they believed tortured them in jail.

Panahi, who has been imprisoned twice in his home country and banned from making films, used his acceptance speech to urge Iranians to work towards freedom.

"I believe this is the moment to call on all people, all Iranians, with all their differing opinions, wherever they are in the world -- in Iran or abroad -- to allow me to ask for one thing," Panahi said, according to a translation.

"Let's set aside all problems, all differences. What matters most right now is our country and the freedom of our country."

Brazil's Wagner Moura won the best actor award for his performance in police thriller "The Secret Agent", while France's Nadia Melliti clinched the gong for best actress.

Melliti, appearing in her first film, plays a 17-year-old Muslim girl in Paris struggling with her homosexuality in Hafsia Herzi's widely acclaimed "The Little Sister".

"Sentimental Value" by Norway's Joachim Trier, a moving family drama given a 19-minute standing ovation on Thursday, picked up the second prize Grand Prix.

The victory for Panahi is a huge endorsement for a director who has become a symbol of defiance in his country, where his films are routinely banned.

He has vowed to return to Tehran after the festival despite the risks of prosecution.

- Sabotage -

Saturday's closing ceremony was the final act of a drama-filled day in Cannes that saw the glitzy seaside resort suffer a more than five-hour power cut.

The outage knocked out traffic lights and had visitors and locals scrambling for paper money because cash machines were out-of-order and restaurants were left unable to process card payments.

Local officials said a suspected arson attack on the substation about 12 kilometres (seven miles) northwest of central Cannes had caused a major fire at around 2:00 am (0000 GMT).

Along the coast in the opposite direction, a pylon which carries a high-voltage line was discovered with three of its four legs damaged, the local prosecutor's office announced.

German director Mascha Schilinski joked that she had "had difficulty writing her speech" because of the black-out as she accepted the jury prize for widely hailed "Sound of Falling".

- Politics -

Beyond the official competition, the French Riviera has been buzzing with A-listers this year including Tom Cruise, pop sensation Charli XCX and model Bella Hadid.

Beyond the champagne-filled beach parties, the wars in Ukraine and Gaza as well as US President Donald Trump have been major talking-points.

US filmmaker Todd Haynes warned of the "barbaric US presidency", while Chilean-American actor Pedro Pascal admitted it was "scary" to speak out against President Donald Trump.

The Gaza war has been on the minds of some of the festival's guests, with more than 900 cinema figures signing an open letter denouncing "genocide" in the Palestinian territory, according to organisers.

Cannes jury head Juliette Binoche, "Schindler's List" star Ralph Fiennes, US indie director Jim Jarmusch and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange -- in town to present a documentary he stars in -- were among the signatories.

But UN special rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories, Francesca Albanese, said the festival felt like a "bubble of indifference" when she visited it Friday.

- Awards -

Other secondary awards were announced before Saturday's closing ceremony.

The first Chechen film to screen at the Cannes Festival -- "Imago" -- won best documentary, while the film about the life of Assange -- "The Six Billion Dollar Man" -- picked up a special jury prize on Friday.

In the secondary Un Certain Regard section, Chilean filmmaker Diego Cespedes won the top prize for "The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo", which follows a group of trans women living in a desert mining town in the 1980s.

On a lighter note, a sheepdog which features in Icelandic family drama "The Love That Remains" won the Palm Dog prize for canine performers in festival films.

Icelandic director Hlynur Palmason cast his own pet, Panda, in his poignant story about a couple navigating a separation.

G.Turek--TPP