by Francesco Stumpo
Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident arrives at Cannes 2025 not simply as a film, but as a political act. Winner of the Palme d’Or, the Iranian director’s latest work transforms personal trauma into taut, darkly ironic cinema.
The story follows a mechanic who becomes convinced that a stranger is the prison guard who once tortured him. What unfolds is less a revenge thriller than a moral labyrinth: Panahi probes memory, paranoia, and justice with a minimalist precision that keeps viewers perpetually unsettled.
Critics have praised the film’s tonal tightrope—balancing absurdist humor with genuine dread. It’s a rare example of political cinema that never feels didactic. Instead, it lingers in ambiguity, asking whether vengeance can ever deliver closure.
What makes the film extraordinary is its restraint. Panahi avoids spectacle, relying instead on silence, glances, and moral tension. The result is a haunting meditation on power and survival—one that confirms Cannes’ enduring role as a platform for cinema that matters.





























