
Panahi's homecoming cheered in Tehran after Cannes triumph
After being banned from leaving Iran for years, forced to make films underground and enduring spells in prison, Panahi attended the French festival in person and sensationally walked away with the Palme d'Or for his latest offering, It Was Just an Accident.
With some fans concerned that Panahi could face trouble on his return to Iran, he arrived without incident at Tehran's main international airport, named after the founder of the 1979 Islamic revolution Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in the early hours of Monday.
"He arrived in Tehran early this morning" and "has returned home," French film producer Philippe Martin told AFP, citing his entourage. "He has even learned that he has obtained a visa to go to a festival in Sydney in about ten days' time."
Panahi was cheered by supporters waiting in the public area as he descended the escalator from passport control to baggage collection, footage posted by the Dadban legal monitor showed on social media.
One person could be heard shouting "Woman. Life. Freedom!" — the slogan of the 2022-2023 protest movement that shook the Iranian authorities.
On exiting, he was greeted by around a dozen supporters who had stayed up to welcome him, according to footage posted on Instagram by the Iranian director Mehdi Naderi and broadcast by the Iran International Channel, which is based outside Iran.
Smiling broadly and waving, he was cheered, applauded, hugged and presented with flowers. "Fresh blood in the veins of Iranian independent cinema," Naderi wrote.
'Gesture of resistance'
The warm welcome at the airport contrasted with the lukewarm reaction from Iranian state media and officials to the first Palme d'Or for an Iranian filmmaker since The Taste of Cherry by the late Abbas Kiarostami in 1997.
While evoked by state media including the IRNA news agency, Panahi's triumph has received only thin coverage inside Iran and has also sparked a diplomatic row with France.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot called his victory "a gesture of resistance against the Iranian regime's oppression" in a post on X, prompting Tehran to summon France's charge d'affaires to protest the "insulting" comments.
"I am not an art expert, but we believe that artistic events and art in general should not be exploited to pursue political objectives," said foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei.
The film is politically charged, showing five Iranians confronting a man they believe tortured them in prison, a story inspired by Panahi's own time in detention.
After winning the prize, Panahi made a call for freedom in Iran. "Let's set aside all problems, all differences. What matters most right now is our country and the freedom of our country."
In an earlier interview with the Guardian prior to winning the Palme d'Or, Panahi expanded on how his own time in prison ended up forming the bedrock for the events that unfold in It Was Just an Accident.
"I was on my own in a tiny cell and they would take me out blindfolded to a place where I would sit in front of a wall and hear this voice at my back. It was the voice of the man who would question me – sometimes for two hours, sometimes for eight hours," he recalled.
The filmmaker added that he spent his time in jail "fantasising" about the person behind the voice. "I had an intuition that someday this voice would be an aspect of something I'd write or shoot and give a creative life to," he noted.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Express Tribune
5 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi announce adoption of baby girl
Millie Bobby Brown has announced that she and her husband Jake Bongiovi have welcomed a baby girl through adoption. The Stranger Things star shared the news with her 67 million Instagram followers on August 21, confirming that the couple has officially embarked on a new chapter in their lives. 'This summer, we welcomed our sweet baby girl through adoption,' Brown wrote in her post. 'We are beyond excited to embark on this beautiful next chapter of parenthood in both peace and privacy.' The couple, who tied the knot in 2024, also included the heartfelt phrase, 'And then there were three,' signaling their transition into parenthood. Brown, 21, has previously been open about her hopes to start a family. Just months earlier, she spoke on the SmartLess podcast about wanting a large family and emphasized that she viewed adoption as equally meaningful as having a biological child. 'I don't see having your own child as really any different than adopting,' she said at the time. 'For me, my home is full of love for anyone and anything.' Her husband Jake Bongiovi, the son of musician Jon Bon Jovi, has also expressed excitement about building a family with Brown. The actress, best known for her role as Eleven in Netflix's hit series Stranger Things, described motherhood as a lifelong dream, saying she values the experience of raising a family more than the idea of a perfect wedding. With this announcement, Brown and Bongiovi join a growing list of young celebrity couples choosing adoption as their path to parenthood.


Express Tribune
8 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Is 'Hostage' Netflix's boldest political thriller yet?
Netflix's new political thriller Hostage has arrived with gripping intensity, putting Suranne Jones in the spotlight as newly elected prime minister Abigail Dalton. The series wastes no time in throwing her into chaos, mixing political intrigue, family turmoil and international terrorism into a story that unfolds at breakneck speed. Dalton's rise to power is quickly overshadowed by personal tragedy. Her husband, a doctor working with humanitarian teams, is kidnapped along with his colleagues while on assignment in French Guiana. At the same time, Dalton faces a national crisis over access to vital cancer drugs, forcing her into tense negotiations with the French president, played with icy precision by Julie Delpy. The stakes rise when terrorists demand Dalton's resignation, leaving her to weigh the safety of her family against her responsibility as leader. The show refuses to linger, delivering five tightly woven hours that avoid the usual streaming bloat. Instead, it's packed with twists, betrayals and moral dilemmas. Dalton's daughter urges her to step down, her dying father pushes for family above politics, and her aides question her ability to lead. The pressure intensifies as public opinion shifts, with sympathy for Dalton's plight quickly giving way to criticism over government failings. Shot across international locations, Hostage feels expansive yet personal, grounding the spectacle in Dalton's emotional battle. What makes it refreshing is the way it presents two women in positions of extraordinary power without turning them into clichés. Both Jones and Delpy are given space to play layered, flawed leaders whose decisions carry devastating consequences. Fast, furious and deeply entertaining, Hostage balances political thrills with human drama. It asks hard questions about leadership, sacrifice and the price of power, all while keeping audiences hooked until the final moment. For Netflix, it's a gamble that pays off in full.


Express Tribune
9 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Florence + the Machine summon chaos with haunting new single ‘Everybody Scream'
Florence + the Machine have unveiled their latest single 'Everybody Scream', the title track from their forthcoming sixth studio album. The release marks a strikingly darker direction for Florence Welch, one that blends theatrical chaos with unnerving mysticism. Driven by a brooding rhythm, Welch sings about the physical and emotional toll of performance, confessing to blood on stage yet being unable to leave the audience's demand for her presence. Her repeated commands for listeners to scream, sing and dance are echoed by a ghostly choir, heightening the track's sense of ritualistic abandon. The accompanying video, directed by Autumn de Wilde, who previously worked with Welch on Dance Fever, captures this energy in vivid detail. Set in a countryside plagued by supernatural disturbance, the imagery depicts people shaking uncontrollably, possessed by an unseen force. Among them is Mark Bowen of IDLES, whose inclusion further cements the project's collaborative edge. Beyond the single, Welch has revealed that the album itself draws from themes of witchcraft, folk horror, and chaos, while also being informed by her recovery from lifesaving surgery during the 2022 Dance Fever tour. She spent two years shaping the record alongside trusted collaborators, including Bowen, Mitski and Aaron Dessner of The National. In one teaser shared with fans, Welch posted a notebook page scrawled with the words 'Swans vs. Adele', hinting at a sound both primal and soaring. That cryptic message has already sparked intense speculation online about how far she will stretch the Florence + the Machine identity. The new album Everybody Scream is set for release on 31 October, aligning its launch with Halloween. Pre-orders are currently live through the band's official site. Welch had teased its arrival with a dramatic Instagram video of herself digging furiously into the earth before letting out an unrestrained scream, a fitting prelude to this unsettling new chapter.