FFI head addresses ‘All We Imagine as Light’ snub and ‘Laapataa Ladies’ exit
FFI head Jahnu Baruaa comments on the backlash over 'All We Imagine as Light' snub after 'Laapataa Ladies' fails to make the shortlist.
Iranian filmmaker Asghar Farhadi, who did not attend this year's Academy Awards to protest against President Donald Trump's travel ban against seven Muslim countries, won his career's second best foreign film Oscar for The Salesman.
Farhadi may have been absent but his strong worded, political speech took centrestage as it was read out by a representative of the film.
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Calling the win a "great honour", Farhadi thanked the Academy for giving him the valuable award for the second time as well as the cast, crew of the film and fellow nominees.
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"I am sorry I am not with you tonight, my absence is out of respect for the people of my country and those of other six nations who have been disrespected by the inhumane law that bans immigrant to the US. Dividing the world into us and our enemies categories creates fear, a deceitful justification for aggression and war," Farhadi's speech read.
The filmmaker, who earlier won the Oscar for A Separation in 2012, was not the frontrunner initially as many thought the trophy would go to German drama Toni Erdmann. But his decision to boycott the ceremony seems to have propelled the voters to honour him in a clear statement against Trump's immigration policy.
"These wars prevent human right and democracy in countries which themselves have been victims of aggression. We need empathy more than ever," the speech concluded.
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