How Did Abbas Kiarostami Film 'Taste Of Cherry' Change Cinema?

2025-08-25 02:16:33 129
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4 Answers

Chloe
Chloe
2025-08-27 06:10:56
Seeing 'Taste of Cherry' for the first time on a small projector felt like a secret exchange: Kiarostami asked me to participate rather than watch passively. The film’s patience—total focus on small conversational moments, long rides through scrubland, and an ending that refuses neat closure—teaches you to tolerate ambiguity and to value subtext.

It also changed cinema by showing that modest resources and simple setups can yield profound effects; festivals paid attention, audiences learned to appreciate silence, and filmmakers worldwide borrowed its minimalist grammar. For me, it’s a film that keeps returning to mind whenever a modern movie rushes to explain everything—reminding me that sometimes the most honest storytelling is the slowest.
Parker
Parker
2025-08-30 16:53:28
A rainy evening and a cramped screening room introduced me to 'Taste of Cherry'—I walked out feeling like somebody had rearranged my sense of pacing. Kiarostami doesn’t do plot fireworks; he compresses existential weight into simple, almost mundane moments: a man driving through the hills seeking someone to bury him, conversations that unfold slowly, the camera as an unobtrusive companion. That slowed rhythm taught other filmmakers the power of restraint: you don’t need exposition or flashy edits for emotional impact.

Kiarostami also blurred the line between documentary and fiction, using non-professional performers and real locations to create authenticity. Internationally, that approach encouraged festivals to embrace films that prioritized atmosphere and internal conflict over conventional narratives. For younger filmmakers and cinephiles, the film was a permission slip—permission to trust silence, to make room for ambiguity, and to let the audience complete the story.
Cole
Cole
2025-08-30 22:58:31
Watching 'Taste of Cherry' felt like being handed the keys to a completely different kind of movie theater. I was in my mid-twenties then, scribbling notes in the margins of a battered film journal, and the way Abbas Kiarostami let the camera linger—the long takes inside a car, the sparse dialogue, the attention to small gestures—punched a hole through everything I thought cinema had to be. He trusted silence and ordinary landscapes to carry weight, and that trust forced me to do some real work as a viewer: to sit with uncertainty, to imagine outcomes, to supply emotions that aren’t spelled out.

Beyond style, 'Taste of Cherry' shifted film culture by legitimizing a minimalist, human-centered cinema on the world stage; winning the Palme d'Or made festivals and distributors look harder at Iranian filmmakers and other storytellers who were working quietly but profoundly. The film’s open-endedness and moral ambiguity nudged later directors toward riskier choices—films that don’t comfort you with neat conclusions but instead leave a question echoing in your head. Watching it again now, I still get that curious, slightly uncomfortable sense that the film respects my imagination—and that, more than any technical trick, is its biggest gift to cinema.
Emilia
Emilia
2025-08-31 03:39:05
Sometimes I think of 'Taste of Cherry' like a quiet revolution that arrived in a beige Toyota. I was older, watching it at home late at night with a cup of tea going cold, and the film’s economy of means felt almost radical. Kiarostami redefined what a ‘dramatic’ film could be by shifting focus from plot mechanics to ethical questions and human encounters—how do we talk about death, how do strangers respond, and what responsibility does a filmmaker have when representing these conversations?

Structurally, he used extended takes, diegetic soundscapes, and sparse editing to make the world feel continuous and lived-in. The camera’s patience invites viewers into a contemplative mode rather than giving them answers. That cultivated a wave of filmmakers who embraced non-linear, elliptical storytelling and who trusted audiences to sit with ambiguity. On a practical level, the film also demonstrated that limited budgets and simple settings won’t stop a work from resonating globally—festivals, critics, and younger directors took notes, and years later you can trace its influence in meditative indies, slow-burn dramas, and even some mainstream films that borrow its tonal restraint.
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