Through The Olive Trees- Abbas Kiarostami

The Art of Persistence: Revisiting Kiarostami’s Through the Olive Trees

Here is a piece reflecting on the film's masterpiece moment and its overarching themes. Through the olive trees- Abbas Kiarostami

The Geography of Destruction

The setting is a landscape of dualities. On one side of the frame, you see the jagged, grey scars of collapsed concrete and shattered brick. On the other, you see the impossibly green, rolling hills of the Caspian coast, punctuated by ancient olive groves. This visual paradox is not accidental. Kiarostami is suggesting that life—and art—exists in the liminal space between utter devastation and serene beauty. The earthquake has leveled houses, but it cannot uproot the trees, nor the stubborn rituals of courtship. Title: Through the Olive Trees Director: Abbas Kiarostami

Kiarostami refuses to give us the audio. We do not know if she says yes, no, or something else entirely. He leaves the question open, suspended like dust in the air. It is not a cheat; it is a gift. The final shot suggests that some conversations—the most important ones—happen beyond the reach of language or cinema. They happen in the space between two people, across a field of olive trees. Here is a piece reflecting on the film's

Hossein

The story follows a film crew that has arrived in the village of Koker to shoot a scene for Kiarostami's previous film, And Life Goes On . The central conflict arises when the local actor cast as the groom, , discovers that the woman cast as his bride is Tahereh , a girl he has unsuccessfully proposed to in real life .

This creates the film’s central tension: the conflict between cinematic reality and social reality. In the movie-within-the-movie, Hossein and Tahereh play a loving married couple. In the "real life" of the production, they are separated by a chasm of class and pride.