At Cannes, Iranian Director Rasoulof Recalls Difficult Exile Decision

Cast member Setareh Maleki and director Mohammad Rasoulof attend a press conference for "The Seed of the Sacred Fig" (Les Graines du figuier sauvage) in competition at the 77th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 25, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
Cast member Setareh Maleki and director Mohammad Rasoulof attend a press conference for "The Seed of the Sacred Fig" (Les Graines du figuier sauvage) in competition at the 77th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 25, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
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At Cannes, Iranian Director Rasoulof Recalls Difficult Exile Decision

Cast member Setareh Maleki and director Mohammad Rasoulof attend a press conference for "The Seed of the Sacred Fig" (Les Graines du figuier sauvage) in competition at the 77th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 25, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
Cast member Setareh Maleki and director Mohammad Rasoulof attend a press conference for "The Seed of the Sacred Fig" (Les Graines du figuier sauvage) in competition at the 77th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 25, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof recalled how he had to decide within hours whether to go into exile or serve a prison sentence, saying it was still difficult to talk about it during a press conference at the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday.

Rasoulof was in the French Riviera town for the premiere of his new drama "The Seed of the Sacred Fig", almost two weeks after announcing he had fled Iran and entered into exile in the wake of his sentencing to eight years in jail and flogging.

After he learned that he had a week left before his sentence would be implemented, things moved quickly, he said, especially as authorities had caught wind of the existence of his new film, Reuters reported.

"I had to say to myself, well, do I want to be in prison, or should I leave Iran, geographic Iran, and join the cultural Iran that exists beyond its borders?" recalled the director.

"It took me two hours to take the decision. I walked around, I paced around my house. I said goodbye to my plants that I love, and I have many, many plants in my house," he added.

Then, Rasoulof left all his belongings and walked out of the house. "It's not an easy decision to take. It still isn't easy even to talk about it today with you," he told journalists.

Iran's culture minister Mohammad Mehdi Esmaili told state media this month that Rasoulof's film had been made illegally and there would be a crackdown on movies without permits.

"The Seed of the Sacred Fig" is about a court official who grows increasingly controlling of his family during the 2022 protests over the death of Mahsa Amini, a Kurdish woman arrested by the morality police for allegedly flouting dress codes.

The film drew the longest standing ovation at the festival after its premiere on Friday night and was well received by critics who called it "mesmerizingly gripping" and "shattering".

The director, who has been arrested and detained several times for charges ranging from filming without a permit to "collusion against national security", said that the idea for the film came from years of confrontation with secret services.

"All these characters were inspired by real people, all the scenes come from real situations," he said, adding that experience has also made him adept at avoiding secret services.

"Our life is fairly similar to that of gangsters, except we are gangsters of the cinema," he joked at the news conference.



Simon Cowell Looks for UK’s Next Megastar Boy Band Again, Save the Show 

Simon Cowell Looks for UK’s Next Megastar Boy Band Again, Save the Show 
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Simon Cowell Looks for UK’s Next Megastar Boy Band Again, Save the Show 

Simon Cowell Looks for UK’s Next Megastar Boy Band Again, Save the Show 

Fourteen years after launching One Direction on "The X Factor", music mogul and television personality Simon Cowell is looking for the UK's next big boy band, embarking on a new project differing from the talent shows he is known for.

Cowell will hold auditions for 16-18 year-olds in Liverpool, Dublin and London over the summer in a bid to form megastars on levels not seen in Britain since the best-selling One Direction, who found fame on his televised singing competition "The X Factor" before parting ways several years later.

"Weirdly since One Direction, there hasn't been a successful UK band, which I don't understand why," Cowell told Reuters in an interview.

"As an entry point into the music business, it's by far the best route. Diana Ross became Diana Ross because she was in the Supremes. Beyonce became Beyonce 'cos she was in Destiny's Child."

Unlike "The X Factor", there will be no weekly televised shows or vote but a potential documentary series.

"As a viewer, I'd find it more interesting, particularly if I was a performer, I'd really want to see why people get chosen and what is the process you go through," Cowell said.

"In my opinion, that's never really been shown, certainly since I've been making these shows ... you see a side of it. I don't think you really see the interesting part ... the highs and lows. And trust me, there are a lot lows."

"The X Factor" last aired in Britain in 2018. Once hugely popular, it had seen ratings fall over the years.

"More people than you think watch these shows ... Now, of course, in different ways as well - on YouTube, TikTok," Cowell said. "I think they're still very popular."

He said talent shows had a purpose, helping new artists get noticed.

"Right now, with the amount of songs that are being uploaded every day and the amount of artists that are breaking globally ... I think it's something like two UK artists in seven years have broken globally ... which is horrendous.

"...A lot of these artists get their first break (on televised talent shows)... even their first audition if it goes out and goes viral, that is a step on the ladder."

In the last few years, K-pop bands such as BTS have become hit phenomena building global fan bases.

"K-pop filled a void," Cowell said. "So when I look at BTS filling out Wembley Stadium, you say, well, then of course there's still a market for bands, possibly bigger than ever."

Cowell, who said his ideal boy band are "people who know who they are", started his search earlier this month. Asked what response he had received so far, he said: "You really don't know until you turn up on the day ... If not enough people turn up or that I just don't think they're right, then we’re gonna have to keep going."