|
|
Hana Makhmalbaf (Persian: ØÙ†Ø§ مخملبا٠) is an Iranian filmmaker born in 1988. She is the younger sister of filmmaker Samira Makhmalbaf and daughter of filmmaker and filmteacher Mohsen Makhmalbaf. CareerHer first short film was shown at the Locarno Film Festival in Ticino, Switzerland when she was eight years old. Her first full film was in 2003 and entitled Joy of Madness. The film is a documentary about the making of Samira's At Five in the Afternoon. Hana was able to take advantage of being only 14 to amass much candid digital footage when Samira was trying to persuade Afghani people to take part in her film. The disadvantage was that she was nearly forbidden from being at its premier at the Venice Film Festival. This is because the film was unrated and Italy has rules concerning minors attending unrated films.[citation needed] Her first feature film, Buddha Collapsed out of Shame won an award at Festival du nouveau cinéma in Montreal, Canada in 2007, as well as two awards from San Sebastian International Film Festival, Spain. References- (Persian) Hana Makhmalbaf's Buddha won two awards at San Sebastian
- (Persian) Hana Makhmalbaf's Buddha won an award at Festival du Nouveau Cinéma in Montreal
External links
 | This biographical article related to film is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
 | This Iranian biographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
(Hana Makhmalbaf hakkındaki yukarıdaki bilgiler WikiPedia.org'dan alınmıştır. Bu bilgiler kesin doğru olmayabilir. Eğer alıntı yapacaksanız lütfen bunu dikkate alın.)
- Hana Makhmalbaf - Samira Makhmalbaf - Mohsen Makhmalbaf
|