Jafar Panahi, the acclaimed director of “This Is Not a Film” and “The Circle,” both masterworks, was unable to attend the Venice premiere of his last feature, “No Bears,” three years ago. At the time, he had been detained by Iranian authorities for protesting the arrest of a fellow filmmaker. Sentenced to six years in prison, Panahi ultimately served two, securing his release in 2023 following a hunger strike.
Now a free man, Panahi returns with “A Simple Accident” —a film that arrives already steeped in significance. Its critical reception was all but inevitable, not only for its artistic merit but because of the deeply personal and political conditions under which it was made.
When the formerly incarcerated Iranian director entered the Palais this afternoon for the film’s premiere, he was greeted with a lengthy standing ovation—a powerful acknowledgment of a man who has been through hell and back in his home country.
That applause only grew more thunderous after the credits rolled, with the film receiving a 10-minute standing ovation—one of the longest of this year’s festival. In a Cannes edition where no one film has emerged as a frontrunner, Panahi now has a major shot at nabbing his first Palme d’Or.
There are absolutely gripping moments in ‘Simple Accident.’ At the center of the drama is Vahid (Vahid Mobasseri), a man who believes he recognizes a man —not by his face, but by a sound: the groaning creak of a prosthetic limb. The noise triggers a visceral memory. Vahid is certain he’s looking at Pegleg, an Iranian regime enforcer who once tortured him.
What follows is a spiraling moral thriller that traps its characters—and the audience—in the fog of doubt, pain, and fury. Without a plan, Vahid abducts the man, enlisting others who bear similar scars to confirm his identity. But certainty proves elusive, and vengeance is not so easily justified.
Panahi, drawing from his seven-month imprisonment and the stories he heard behind bars, builds a narrative that burns with rage but breathes with empathy. There is humor, absurdity, even flashes of irony. This is a fierce, unflinching indictment of a system that punishes dissent and erases accountability; I am not entirely sure how Panahi cam conceivably go back to Iran after having made this film, but in an act of resistance, it does look like he will.
And yet, amid the furious anger of the film, there is a call—not for revenge, but for remorse. That is Panahi’s most powerful plea. It may be the film’s most radical act: not to scream for punishment, but to insist that suffering be acknowledged.
Shot without state approval, “It Was Just an Accident” is Panahi’s first film since 2022’s “No Bears,” and a return to more straight-laced dramatic cinema for the filmmaker. It’s messy, confrontational, and occasionally didactic, especially in its final stretch —but many will brush the former. The film has a more formal sense of composition than the oppressed and experimental moviemaking he did while stifled by the regime, especially his 2012 meta-masterpiece “This Is Not A Film.”
Yet here Panahi once again proves why he’s one of the essential voices in world cinema: not because he tells us what to think, but because he refuses to let us look away.