Which Abbas Kiarostami Film Features Non-Professional Actors?

2025-08-25 08:36:10 170
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4 Answers

Mason
Mason
2025-08-27 21:13:18
I get a little excited whenever someone brings up Kiarostami, because his use of non-professional actors is one of the things that makes his films feel so alive. If I had to pick one film that most famously features non-professional performers, it'd be 'Close-Up'. In that film Kiarostami literally casts the real people involved in the incident at the center of the story — they reenact themselves, blurring documentary and fiction in a way that still makes my skin tingle.

Beyond 'Close-Up', Kiarostami regularly worked with non-actors: the lead in 'Taste of Cherry' was Homayoun Ershadi, who wasn’t a trained actor when Kiarostami discovered him; and the children in 'Where Is the Friend’s Home?' are non-professionals too, which gives those scenes a natural, spontaneous charm. I love watching how their unpolished reactions create a kind of honesty scripted performances rarely achieve. If you haven’t seen 'Close-Up', watch it with minimal context and let it unsettle you a little — it’s like being let into someone else’s private memory.
Peter
Peter
2025-08-29 10:39:40
A short, enthusiastic confession: 'Close-Up' is my go-to example whenever someone asks which Kiarostami film features non-professional actors. The structure is almost a case study in mixing reality and fiction — real participants reenact events from their lives, so you’re watching people be themselves and perform at the same time.

But if you zoom out, Kiarostami used non-professionals across his career. I like to think of it as a creative rule he kept coming back to because it produced unpredictability and tenderness. Try watching his films in this order for a neat progression: start with 'Where Is the Friend’s Home?' to see children’s naturalness, then 'Taste of Cherry' to feel how a non-actor anchors a philosophical story, and finish with 'Close-Up' to experience the most daring blend of reality and reenactment. Seeing them back-to-back changed how I view performance and authenticity in cinema.
Xavier
Xavier
2025-08-30 06:03:38
I've been telling friends about this one: 'Close-Up' is the Kiarostami film that most clearly features non-professional actors, and it’s brilliant for it. The director takes a real-life court case about a man who impersonated a filmmaker and turns it into a layered piece where the actual people involved play themselves. That choice makes the whole film feel equal parts documentary, drama, and ethical puzzle.

Kiarostami didn’t stop there — he often used everyday people rather than trained stars, which gives his movies this grounded, grainy realism. When I watch 'Taste of Cherry' or 'Where Is the Friend’s Home?', I’m struck by how natural the performances are; they aren’t polished, but they’re honest. If you’re dipping your toes into his work, 'Close-Up' is where the technique is most obvious and most rewarding.
Ryder
Ryder
2025-08-31 16:11:15
If you want the quickest, clearest pick: watch 'Close-Up'. It famously uses non-professional actors — in fact, many of the people on screen are the very individuals involved in the true story Kiarostami adapts. That casting choice gives the film a fragile, uncanny honesty that lingers.

I also appreciate how Kiarostami repeatedly favored non-actors in films like 'Taste of Cherry' and 'Where Is the Friend’s Home?'; their unpolished responses make interactions feel lived-in, not staged. For a first taste, start with 'Close-Up' and let the line between reality and fiction do its work on you.
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