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==External links==
==External links==
*{{official website|http://www.cinemajidi.com/}}
*{{Unofficial website -Run by his fan Fouad Nahas|http://www.cinemajidi.com/}}
*{{IMDb name|0006498|Majid Majidi}}
*{{IMDb name|0006498|Majid Majidi}}



Revision as of 10:27, 30 March 2016

Majid Majidi
مجید مجیدی
Born (1959-04-17) April 17, 1959 (age 65)
Occupation(s)Director, producer, screenwriter
Years active1981–present
Websitewww.cinemajidi.com

Majid Majidi (Template:Lang-fa Persian pronunciation: [mæˌd͡ʒiːde mæd͡ʒiːˈdi], born 17 April 1959, Tehran) is an Iranian film director, film producer, and screenwriter who started his film carrier as an actor. In his films, Majidi has touched on many themes and genres and has won numerous international awards.

Biography

Born in an Iranian middle-class family, he grew up in Tehran and at the age of 14 he started acting in amateur theater groups. He then studied at the Institute of Dramatic Arts in Tehran.

After the Iranian Revolution in 1979, his interest in cinema brought him to act in various films, most notably Mohsen Makhmalbaf's Boycott in 1985.

In 1998, Majidi directed the film Children of Heaven, which was nominated to receive the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Though it lost to the Italian film Life Is Beautiful by Roberto Benigni, Children of Heaven is the first Iranian film to have been nominated by the Academy.

Majidi has directed several other feature films since Children of Heaven: The Color of Paradise in 2000, Baran in 2001, and The Willow Tree in 2005 (alternate English title One Life More). He also recently directed a feature-length documentary titled Barefoot to Herat which chronicles life in refugee camps and the city of Herat during and after the anti-Taliban offensive of 2001.

In 2008, Majidi's acclaimed film The Song of Sparrows was the opening film of the Visakhapatnam International Film Festival in India.[1]

Majid Majidi was one of five international film directors invited by the Beijing government to create a documentary short film to introduce the city of Beijing, in preparation for the 2008 Summer Olympics which was held in the Chinese capital; the project was titled "Vision Beijing".[2]

Majidi pulled out of a Danish film festival in protest against the publication in Denmark of cartoons satirizing the Islamic prophet, Muhammad. Majidi stated that he was withdrawing "to protest against insulting any religious belief or icon".[3] Majidi writes, "I believe in God and live with my beliefs in every single moment of my life. I would like to protest against insulting any religious belief and icon. For this reason, I would like to announce my withdrawal from your festival."

Filmography: Directing

  1. Explosion (Enfejar) (1981) - documentary short
  2. Hoodaj (1984) - short
  3. Examination Day (Rooz-e Emtehan) (1988) - short
  4. A Day with POWs (Yek Rooz Ba Asiran) (1989) - documentary short
  5. Baduk (1992) - debut feature
  6. The Last Village (Akhareen Abadi) (1993) - short
  7. Father (Pedar) (1996) - feature
  8. God Will Come (Khoda Miayad) (1996) - short
  9. Children of Heaven (Bacheha-ye Aseman) (1997) - feature
  10. The Color of Paradise (Rang-e Khoda) (1999) - feature
  11. Baran (Rain) (2001) - feature
  12. Barefoot to Herat (Pa berahneh ta Herat) (2002) - documentary
  13. Olympics in the Camp (Olympik Tu Urdugah) (2003) - documentary short
  14. The Willow Tree (Beed-e Majnoon; alternate English title One Life More) (2005) - feature
  15. Peace, Love, and Friendship (2007) - documentary short
  16. Rezae Rezvan (2007) - documentary
  17. Najva ashorai (2008) - documentary
  18. The Song of Sparrows (Avaze Gonjesh ka) (2008) - feature
  19. Muhammad (2015) - feature
  20. Kashmir Afloat - in production.

Awards and honors

Majid Majidi has received numerous awards up to now. Here are a few:

  • Oecumenical Special Award, 25th Montreal Film Festival, 2001.
  • Grand Prix Des Ameriques, 25th Montreal Film Festival, 2001.
  • Nominated for Academy Awards for Best Foreign Film, 1998.
  • Grand Prix of Americas Best Film, 21st Montreal Festival for World Films, 1999.

References