Can’t wait to see 'Through the Olive Trees' right from your couch? Hunting down a streaming service to buy, rent, download, or view the Abbas Kiarostami-directed movie via subscription can be difficult, so we here at Moviefone want to help you out.
Read on for a listing of streaming and cable services - including rental, purchase, and subscription choices - along with the availability of 'Through the Olive Trees' on each platform when they are available. Now, before we get into all the details of how you can watch 'Through the Olive Trees' right now, here are some details about the CiBy 2000, Kiarostami Foundation, Farabi Cinema drama flick.
Through the Olive Trees starring Mohammadali Keshavarz, Farhad Kheradmand, Zarifeh Shiva, Hossein Rezai has a Not Rated rating, a runtime of about 1 hr 44 min, and a scheduled release date of September 25th, 1994.
It received a user score of 74/100 on TMDb, which assembled reviews from 185 experienced users.
Ready to dive into the plot? Here's the plot: "When the actor in a scene for his film Life And Nothing More… has to quit, a film director casts another man for the part. However, complications arise since the man and the woman who was cast for the scene know each other."
'Through the Olive Trees' is currently available to rent, purchase, or stream via subscription on Apple TV, Google Play Movies, Fandango At Home, Prime Video, Criterion Channel, and YouTube .
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The Koker Trilogy
The Koker trilogy is a series of three films directed by acclaimed Iranian film-maker Abbas Kiarostami: Where Is the Friend's Home? (1987), Life, and Nothing More... (a.k.a. And Life Goes On, 1992) and Through the Olive Trees (1994). Where Is the Friend's Home? depicts the simple story of a young boy who travels from Koker to a neighbouring village to return the notebook of a schoolmate. Life and Nothing More follows a father and his young son as they drive from Tehran to Koker in search of the two young boys from Where Is the Friend's Home?, fearing that the two might have perished in the 1990 Iran earthquake that killed 50,000 people in northern Iran. Through the Olive Trees examines the making of a small scene from Life, forcing the viewer to witness a peripheral drama from Life as the central drama in Olive.