
A Simple Accident review – Jafar Panahi takes us on a nightmare trip into a land of bribes and brutality
Jafar Panahi is the veteran Iranian auteur and democracy campaigner who continues to get arrested and imprisoned, to endure film-making bans and defy the law, finding loopholes through which his movies can be made and shown abroad. And the Iranian authorities, tensely and hypocritically aware of world scrutiny and indeed the soft-power prestige still to be accrued from Panahi's eminence, appear (almost) to tolerate it.
Now Panahi has come to Cannes with what might be his most emotionally explicit film yet: a film about state violence and revenge, about the pain of tyranny that co-exists with ostensible everyday normality. There are macabre stabs of satire, black comedy and horror-farce, and the movie almost looks like an Iranian dissident tribute to Weekend at Bernie's or even Hitchcock's The Trouble With Harry.
A man (Ebrahim Azizi) is driving at night with his heavily pregnant wife and young daughter in the car and suffers the time-honoured suspense thriller shock-premise of hitting something in the darkness: a dog. This simple accident causes his car to break down after just five minutes back on the road, and he finds himself pulling over at random at a garage belonging to Vahid (Vahid Mobasseri), nicknamed 'Jughead' because of his habit of holding his painful kidneys with one hand, his arm like a jug handle.
The driver has a disability too, a limp, and Vahid is stunned, scared and angry to realise that he knows this man; and it sets in train a bizarre series of events that reunites a disparate cohort of Vahid's acquaintances who have all suffered at the hands of the state. These include bookseller Salar, wedding photographer Shiva (Mariam Afshari), the couple whose wedding photos she is taking, bride Goli (Hadis Pakbaten) and groom Ali (Majid Panahi), and local hothead Hamid (Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr).
A grotesque, almost dreamlike sequence of scenes takes us to various locations, including a remote desert with a tree that Hamid says looks a stage-set for Waiting for Godot. The plot twists and turns are startling, almost unreal; can it be true that normal people like this can countenance violence? But if that seems implausible, perhaps that is because we don't grasp the violence through which they have already lived. The narrative jolts and shunts us around like Vahid and his contemporaries in the back of his van; so do the shifts in tone from tragedy to comedy and back. But these storytelling chicanes never quite get us to the shark-jumping point of facetiousness or absurdity that they might in another, Anglo-Hollywood type of movie.
There is some acid satire on Iranian officialdom's addiction to bribes. A hospital nurse asks Vahid if he knows how to give a 'present' or just make a scandal – and she wants a box of pastries to go with the money. A couple of shifty, dodgy security guards ask for a 'present' in exchange for not making a fuss about the suspicious behaviour in the van, and not having cash doesn't let Vahid off; these uniformed guys grinningly produce a debit card reader. They take bribes in the form of contactless payments.
Perhaps Joe Orton might have enjoyed this tough, cynical movie, especially the group scenes in which Goli has to participate in the mayhem wearing her wedding dress. It's another very impressive serio-comic film from one of the most distinctive and courageous figures in world cinema.
A Simple Accident screened at the Cannes film festival.
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Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Mariska Hargitay's biological father is seen for the FIRST time since paternity bombshell revealed
Mariska Hargitay revealed a bombshell family secret she has kept hidden for over 30 years in her new documentary about her iconic late mother Jayne Mansfield. Hargitay's documentary, My Mom Jayne, which marks her feature film directorial debut, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last month. In the film, the Law & Order: Special Victims Unit star revealed that her biological father is not Mickey Hargitay, the man who raised her. The paternity bombshell revealed that former Las Vegas entertainer Nelson Sardelli is her father and he was spotted for the first time since that was made public. Sardelli, 90, was photographed exiting a beige minivan and walking with a cane up to a white iron fence in front of a house. In an interview with Vanity Fair, Hargitay said she went to see Sardelli perform in Atlantic City, New Jersey when she was 30 years old and introduced herself to him as his daughter. The Law & Order: Special Victims Unit star revealed that her biological father is not Mickey Hargitay, the man who raised her. The paternity bombshell revealed that former Las Vegas entertainer Nelson Sardelli is her father. Sardelli seen here June 7, 2025 She told the outlet that he was moved to tears when he told her: 'I've been waiting 30 years for this moment.' Hargitay said that she ended up giving him a hard time and went 'full Olivia Benson' on him, referring to her Law & Order: SVU character. 'I was like, "I don't want anything. I don't need anything from you... I have a dad",' she recalled telling him. 'There was something about loyalty. I wanted to be loyal to Mickey.' After that meeting, she said that she struggled with learning the secret about having more family members, 'knowing I'm living a lie my entire life.' She opened up about the revelation in a Vanity Fair interview just shortly after premiering her documentary about her late mother, who passed away in June 1967 in a tragic car accident, when she was 34 and Mariska was just three years old' She told the outlet that she learned about the secret when she was already an adult. At age 25, she found out that her biological father is Sardelli. She later confronted Mickey, the man who raised her, but he insisted that he was her father. They never discussed it again, but she recalled how she continued to question her lineage, wondering if she was truly Hungarian like her father Mickey — who passed away at the age of 80 in 2006 — and her brothers, Zoltan and Mickey Jr. In an interview with Vanity Fair , Hargitay said she went to see Sardelli perform in Atlantic City, New Jersey when she was 30 years old and introduced herself to him as his daughter. Seen here June 6, 2025 Mariska shared that her biological father is not Mickey Hargitay, the man who raised her; Mickey pictured with Jayne, baby Mariska, sons Zoltan, Mikos, and daughter Jayne from Mansfield's previous marriage Jayne was not only an international sex symbol in the 1950s and 1960s, but an award winning actress - winning a Golden Globe Award and a Theatre World Award. She tragically died at age 34 in a car accident in Biloxi, Mississippi on June 29, 1967. Mariska was in the car with her mom during the horrific accident; Mariska was three years old at the time, along with her siblings Miklos, then eight, and Zoltan, then six. The accident took place on US Highway 90 on June 29, 1967 in Biloxi, Mississippi with Jayne, her attorney and partner Sam Brody (who was 40), and the driver (Ronald B. Harrison, 19) in front row with two of her dogs, and her three kids Mariska, Miklos and Zoltan with her other two dogs in the back. They left the Gus Stevens Supper Club after midnight to head to New Orleans for an appearance Jayne was set to make the next day. However at 2:25 am on June 29, 1967, the car crashed into the back of a tractor trailer that had slowed down in front of it - which occurred because of a insecticide fog spraying truck flashing a red light ahead of them. The front row (Jayne, Sam and Ronald) plus two dogs died instantly - with the back row - her three kids and two dogs - only had minor injuries. The kids were sleeping in the back of the car. Mariska told Vanity Fair she went to see Sardelli perform in Atlantic City when she was 30 years old and introduced herself to him as his daughter, and he told her he'd been 'waiting 30 years for this moment'; Jayne pictured kissing Nelson Sardelli, who is now in his late eighties, also appeared in her documentary alongside his other two daughters, Hargitay's half sisters Giovanna and Pietra. Hargitay told the outlet that she eventually opened up to Sardelli and his daughters after understanding and accepting that her mother returned to Mickey because she knew he would provide a stabler home life for her. She said that she gathered her sisters in Las Vegas for a private screening of the documentary before the premiere and recalled their emotional reactions. 'They just wept and wept and wept. These two women that I love so much — I made them secrets! It's so heartbreaking to me.' In the documentary, Hargitay explained why she was unveiling her family secret now and said that because she is now 61 years old, she felt she could finally tell the truth and didn't have to hide it anymore. 'I grew up where I was supposed to, and I do know that everyone made the best choice for me,' she said. 'I'm Mickey Hargitay's daughter — that is not a lie.' 'This documentary is kind of a love letter to him, because there's no one that I was closer to on this planet,' she said. She explained that she wanted to make the documentary to 'unburden all of us.' Jayne had five kids total - daughter Jayne Marie with first husband Paul Mansfield, three children (Miklos, Zoltan and Mariska) with her second husband Mickey Hargitay - and one son Antonio with third husband Matt Cimber. Jayne, who was born on April 19, 1933, first appeared in Playboy magazine as the February 1955 Playmate of the Month, and multiple other issues after. As an actress, she starred in The Girl Can't Help It, The Wayward Bus, Too Hot to Handle and Promises! Promises!, as well as the Broadway play Will Success Rock Hunter? My Mom Jayne, which will air on HBO, will follow Mariska as she 'seeks to know, understand, and embrace her mom for the first time,' per the outlet. Mariska has made a name for herself in Hollywood - best known for her iconic role of Olivia Benson in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. She has played Olivia in the hit series since 1999. She is a Globe Globe winner and a two-time Emmy winner, with her own Hollywood Walk of Fame star, which she received in 2013. Mariska has been married to Younger star Peter Hermann, 57. They share three kids–two sons and a daughter.


The Sun
10 hours ago
- The Sun
I met ISIS bride Shamima Begum in prison camp – I felt sorry for her but saw true colours when I gave her wrong ‘gift'
AS Andrew Drury made his way through a Syrian camp looking for notorious ISIS bride Shamima Begum, his mind began to race. Although the intrepid filmmaker had been in far more perilous situations - his nerves started to get the better of him. 7 7 7 But when he was introduced to Begum - who left the UK aged 15 to join ISIS a decade ago in 2015 - he was taken aback. "She was very shaky, very nervous, very shut, emotional, tearful," Andrew told The Sun. Father-of-four Andrew met Begum, who grew up in East London, for the first of six times at the Al-Roj camp in Syria in June 2021 while filming for a documentary, Danger Zone. He initially felt sorry for Begum, then 21, and became a close confidant of the Jihadi bride - even securing a Bafta-nominated live interview with her for Good Morning Britain. In less than two years his view of Begum - accused of serving in the feared IS "morality police" and helping make suicide vests - completely changed, however. He saw a colder side when she talked about how the death of her three children no longer upset her and even expressed support of Manchester Arena bomber Salman Abedi. Extreme adventurer Andrew, who has made treacherous journeys to North Korea and Iraq, said at first Begum was a "thin, ill-looking, sad character" who was "very apologetic". "We took a long walk around the camp, She started to relax, and she said she used to take this regular walk right around the perimeter of the camp to clear her head," he said. "After the interview finished, we walked back to the room. Normally she'd go off to a tent, but she wanted to come back to the room to get a cold drink. "Then I didn't want to insult her at that point, I wanted to say goodbye - I thought I'd never see her again. How Shamima Begum camps are fermenting twisted next generation of ISIS as kids make 'cutthroat' gesture & hurl firebombs "I said, 'Can I shake your hand?' and she asked for a hug. "So she gave me a hug and started to cry." Andrew, from Surrey, said he felt they had formed a connection and believed she regretted turning her back on Western society to join the murderous death cult. "At that point I kind of believed that she was sincere," he said. "I kind of felt sorry for her. I thought at that point she'd been radicalised online, sent out as a prescribed bridge to somebody. "She said she'd made a real bad mistake and really regretted what she'd done. "She owned up to being this person that everybody hates in the UK. "And I felt sorry for her, I've got young daughters, not a lot of difference in age, so I thought people do make mistakes, and I should give her a chance." Andrew - whose book Trip Hazard details his experience in dangerous areas - returned to the camp months later after GMB asked for his help to get an interview with Begum. The author, who has exchanged hundreds of messages with Begum, said he noticed a "subtle change" in the former Brit. Begum, who was stripped of her British citizenship in 2019, appeared to have undergone a more "Western" makeover - ditching her hijab and abaya. 7 7 "She had changed as a character," Andrew said. "She was more short. She wasn't this nervous-cry sort of character. "She looked assured, and she didn't seem such a waif character, and she seemed to be in control of herself and her emotions." Andrew told how Begum spent the night before the live interview "rehearsing" with three of her friends In the camp, which is controlled by armed guards. He added: "Her friends said they'd had their music playing and they were tutoring Shamima what to say. "They seemed pretty together about what she should say, and they were schooling her." Begum married an IS fighter soon after arriving in Syria and went on to have three children, none of whom survived. Andrew - who said he had formed a "bond" with Begum - told how after the interview, Shamima opened her purse and showed him photos of her children. The tragic loss of his own brother Robert as a child made him sympathise with Shamima's plight. "One of them was a scene where the child must have been eight, nine months old, had chocolate around his face," he recalled. "I said, 'What's that?' and she said, 'Oh we used to like baking cakes'. "And it actually makes me quite sad. It was really quite sad knowing the child had died. "She made it sound like an honour that she had shared these pictures with me, which I guess it probably was, because she hadn't shared them before she said." 7 But it was Begum's attitude after Andrew returned to the UK that shocked him - and began to shatter their relationship. "I said to her, 'Those pictures you showed me really upset me, I hope you're okay'," he said. "She messaged back and said, 'Oh, they don't bother me anymore. That doesn't make me sad'. "I thought, was that because she's been traumatised so badly? "But I think she is that hard. I think she's calculated. "I actually don't think the death of her children actually bothered her in the slightest. She was not at all affected by it." After meeting Andrew a couple of times, Begum started asking him to bring stuff into the camp for her - including clothes. The dad said he felt "at a crossroads" about whether to take what she wanted. "I felt bad and guilty that I'd be taking somebody that carried out what could have been some atrocities, clothes," he said. "But then, probably on the soft side of me, and the fact is, she was a young girl, so I was playing with these emotions, but I took her the clothes from Primark. "We had a bundle of stuff, we took some toys for the children because it's not their fault." But then Begum's requests started turning into demands, Andrew said. "The messages continued," he added. Camps breeding next ISIS generation Exclusive by Henry Holloway, Deputy Foreign Editor and Alan Duncan A CHILD no older than eight draws his hand across his neck in a chilling throat-slitting gesture - the message is clear, "You are not welcome here". Other kids hurl stones, shout and scream - while one exasperated camp official shows us CCTV of two youngsters hurling a firebomb. Welcome to camps al-Hol and al-Roj in northern Syria - the fates of which remain uncertain after the fall of tyrant Bashar al-Assad. It is warned these stark detention centres are now the breeding ground for the next generation of the bloodthirsty cult. And much of this new wave of radicalisation is feared to be coming from the mothers inside the camps. Senior camp official Rashid Omer said: "The reality is - they are not changing. This is not a normal camp - this a bomb." He went on: "They are saying it was ISIS who 'liberated' Damascus - and soon they will be coming here." "And then they want to spread to Europe, to Africa, and then to everywhere." The two sprawling sites hold a total of nearly 60,000 including ISIS fighters, families and children. At least 6,000 Westerners are still held among them - including infamous jihadi bride Shamima Begum, the 25-year-old from London. "This time they became slightly more angry, slightly more direct." Before he planned to return to Syria again, Begum told him she wanted two books - Guantanamo Bay Diaries and Sea Prayer - which is inspired by the Syrian refugee crisis. Andrew said she was also being schooled by her lawyer about her media presence. He added: "What she declared by then is that she was hostage in a prison camp - where they were legally held. "That's how she started to see herself. All apologies had gone. "She'd done a documentary with the BBC and was on the front of The Times magazine. "She'd become a celebrity and was loving all the attention. She'd read all the newspaper articles." Andrew - who returned to the camp with a friend and no crew - took some clothes for Begum with him. But it was his decision not to take the books she had demanded that revealed her true colours. "I did go back again, but my feelings were already changing towards her," Andrew said. "It was a little boy's birthday, and I felt so sorry for him. "He wanted a Superman outfit, so I would have gone just for that, because I spend a lot of time in refugee camps. It's not fair for these kids. "I didn't take the books Shamima wanted because I didn't want to. I didn't want her to have that opportunity to what I saw as studying how to be a victim. "She opened the clothes, said she didn't like them. I mean, this is a girl in a prison camp. "She said, 'I didn't really care about the clothes, it was the books I wanted'. So she became quite aggressive in her nature." Who is Shamima Begum? ISIS bride Shamima Begum, who was born in Britain, was stripped of her British citizenship on February 20, 2019. Begum had fled the UK in February 2015 with two other Bethnal Green schoolgirls to join the fledgling caliphate in Iraq and Syria which had emerged out of the chaos of war in those two countries. In February 2019, after the ISIS empire fell, she declared that she wanted to come home with her son. But she appeared to show no remorse and called the 2017 Manchester Arena massacre of 22 people attending a concert 'justified". Her principled position has sparked intense debate about the UK's responsibilities to jihadis who despise the country and everything it stands for, but want to return from Syria. The case took a dramatic turn on February 20 2019 when it emerged the Home Office had opted to strip Ms Begum of her British citizenship. Begum claims she is " willing to change" her ways while pleading for "mercy" from Britain. Her appeals against the decision have all been denied. Begum's attitude then worsened when Andrew became interested in another girl's story. It was one of the final nails in the coffin in the bond Andrew believed they had initially formed. "Shamima had a tantrum that the attention had been taken away from her," he said. "She was like a child that was pretending they were ill. "So during this period of time I was beginning to feel like the connection was gone. "It was broken, and I was beginning not to like her. "I could see things in her I didn't like. I didn't trust her. Her behaviour was poor. She was angry and aggressive. "I had found out from other girls what she was accused of, and they told me the same thing that I had heard before, like sewing suicide vests "Things were ringing in my head like she said early on that the Manchester bombing was legitimate because of what happened in Iraq and Syria. "So I didn't trust her." Andrew's last contact with Begum was around two years ago in a fiery text exchange. She accused Andrew of "selling her out", to which he shot back: "You've sold your country out." Begum last year lost her final appeal challenging the removal of her British citizenship. She can now no longer fight to overturn the revocation of her citizenship within the UK legal system. Andrew said: "I think she's a danger for what she stood for, and I don't think she could ever come back. "I think she needs to go on trial in Syria for the crimes she committed against the Syrian people."


Daily Mail
15 hours ago
- Daily Mail
People left disgusted by bizarre new 'hairy' Dubai chocolate bar and say it looks like 'loft insulation'
People have been left disgusted by a bizarre new 'hairy chocolate bar' coming from Dubai. The 'Hairy Daddy' pink chocolate bar, which was launched by noon Minutes, contains 'fairy' candy floss, which gives a 'hairy' appearance. The pink white chocolate bar features a blue artistic design on the chocolate similar to the popular Dubai chocolate which took the world by storm in recent months. The strange creation is priced at AED11 [£2.22] for the small version and AED33 [£6.65] for the big one. A video showcasing the new treat was shared on social media by Time Out Dubai and gained over 26,000 views. The clip left many social media users baffled with hundreds rushing to the comments to leave their own thoughts. While some applauded the creativity, many weren't quite ready to eat something that looks like it needs grooming, with some likening it to 'Loft insulation'. One person wrote: 'Dubai, you need to calm down.' Another added: 'ENOUGH I BEG YOU!' Someone else said: 'Is this all getting a bit out of hand?' A fourth added: 'Yuck it looks sick.' Another quipped: 'Looks like walls insulation.' However, others have pointed out that this type of chocolate is not a new concept, noting that similar versions have been available in various countries for years. One person said: 'The white 'hairy' stuff stuffed inside the chocolate is actually sugar candy a.k.a. Candy floss. 'Nothing special about that. In the Gulf or Middle East countries these sweets originated from Iran. Back in the 90's they called it Iranian sweets.' Another said: 'It's not new, we have it in Turkey and call it Pişmaniye.' Someone else added: 'We've had those for ages in Lebanon, also pistachio chocolate we've had it, nothing special nor new.' The new bar comes after chocolate lovers all around the world went into a frenzy for the popular Dubai chocolate. British shoppers were buzzing over the launch of the Dubai chocolate at UK supermarkets, with some queuing up to get their hands on the sweet treat. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Time Out Dubai (@timeoutdubai) The milk chocolate bar is filled with crispy knafeh, pistachio cream and tahini spread. Last year, influencers flew across the world to get their hands on it when it was created by Dubai-based Fix Dessert Chocolatier. Dozens of confectioners created their own versions, with Lidl and Waitrose among the supermarkets flogging the chocolate bar in the UK. In April supermarkets saw a rush on Brits trying to get their hands on the bar, and even limited customers to only buying two bars each. Bingbing, an influencer from London, revealed she headed to her local Lidl at 7.30am on a Saturday morning, to discover a queue outside. Once inside, she said she couldn't find the chocolate, and had to ask for it from a worker who kept it behind the till. 'I can't believe we woke up at 7:30 on a Saturday to queue, but it seems like other people had the same idea,' she explained. 'We arrived around 7.55 and there were about 30 people outside already for the 8am opening.' 'As soon as the doors opened, everyone just rushed in and no one knew where the chocolate was. 'It retails for £4.99 per bar but if you have the Lidl plus card, it's £3.99 and it's limited to two per person. 'People went crazy for the chocolate bars, they were arguing with staff about the limits. We managed to get two each,' she added. Elsewhere, Waitrose added the popular Lindt Dubai Style Chocolate to selected stores on Sunday, and are now limiting the amount of sales each customer can get. The chocolate has become the store's fastest-selling confectionery product. The flavour has proven popular with chocolate lovers in the UK after videos were share of it on TikTok, with stores such as M&S, Lidl and Morrisons also selling the delicious treat. Steve Dresser, CEO of Grocery Insight, posted a photo of new signage in a Waitrose store on LinkedIn. 'No more than 2 bars per person please… because we want everyone to have the chance to enjoy our delicious chocolate. Thank for your understanding,' the sign read. A spokesman for Waitrose told The Grocer that the limit was introduced to regulate stock levels of the £10 bars. A representative said: 'Due to the incredible popularity of this product, we want to make sure that as many customers as possible have the opportunity to try it.'