2026-01-23
26 分钟I've been really looking forward to discussing your film.
It was just an accident.
But first, you've been making films for decades.
You've been recognized on the international stage as a stalwart of Iranian cinema.
You've also faced many obstacles, including imprisonment,
house arrest, filmmaking bans, now a new prison sentence.
In the face of all of these challenges, why are you so compelled to continue to make films.
Because I know no other work.
This is Jafar Panahi speaking to me through his Persian translator, Sheda Dayani.
I've been really eager to speak with Panahi.
He's an acclaimed filmmaker who's been jailed and censored for his art in his home country of Iran.
At one point, the government banned him from making films for 20 years.
It didn't stop him.
Panahi is facing a new prison sentence in Iran after the release of his latest film,
called It Was Just An Accident.
The film is about a group of former political prisoners who kidnap a man they suspect was their torturer.
But they aren't completely sure it's him.
Panahi did not have official permission to make this movie, so he had to shoot it in secret in Iran.
Since the film's release,
authorities in Iran have accused Panahi of propaganda activities against the system.