Berlin Film Festival

Film on capital punishment in Iran wins Golden Bear prize

Actress Baran Rasoulof (above) picked up the Golden Bear award on behalf of her father, director Mohammad Rasoulof, for his work, There Is No Evil, last Saturday.
Actress Baran Rasoulof (above) picked up the Golden Bear award on behalf of her father, director Mohammad Rasoulof, for his work, There Is No Evil, last Saturday. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

BERLIN • There Is No Evil, a study of capital punishment filmed in secret defiance of Iranian government censorship by director Mohammad Rasoulof, won the Berlin Film Festival's Golden Bear award last Saturday.

Rasoulof, whose film explores the moral dilemmas thrust on those chosen to carry out executions and the consequences of defiance for them and those around them, was unable to leave Iran to pick up the award because of propaganda charges he faces in relation to earlier films.

"This is for him," said his daughter Baran, who stars in the film and picked up the award on his behalf.

Producer Kaveh Farnam thanked the cast and crew "who put their lives in danger to be in this film".

Jury president Jeremy Irons described the film as "four stories showing the web an authoritarian regime weaves among ordinary people, drawing them towards inhumanity", adding that the film "asks questions about our own responsibility and choices we all make in life".

The second-place Silver Bear went to Eliza Hittman's Never Rarely Sometimes Always, the story of two teenagers from the rural United States defying anti-abortion activists, poverty, physical and mental harassment and expensive healthcare to obtain the pregnancy termination one of them needs.

Hong Sang-soo from South Korea won a best director Silver Bear for The Woman Who Ran, a work about female friendship, loneliness, men who intrude and a cat that, filmed washing itself and yawning, reduced audiences to stitches of laughter.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on March 02, 2020, with the headline Film on capital punishment in Iran wins Golden Bear prize. Subscribe