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Certified Copy

Abbas Kiarostomi's Certified Copy is an interesting film. It is simple yet complex. If one would ask me if I got the point of the film, I would stay confused. It is a film that I enjoyed but never really understood!
There are certain things that I'm certain of the film and those things simply force me to love it beyond the un-understood episodes that come after. Juliette Binoche comes up with one of the best performances I have ever seen from an actress. She is not just beautiful but also performs to her beauty. William Shimell, a man whom I'm not familiar also manages to be so convincing as the writer who is present opposite Juliette. 
The film like one of Kiarostomi's earlier films is all talking with brilliant long shots to balance the conversations. I'm quite uncertain how Kiarostomi manages to grab such awesome performances from his actors who have to talk so much without a cut. The dialogues are fun and witty at times and are so well written. The flow in which the actors shift from one language to another has a very natural flow which makes the film even more interesting while viewing. Kiarostomi has managed to write a very complicated screenplay which was more or less a trap for a viewer like me. His framework stays 100 percent true to the tagline of the film An Original Love Story?
The chemistry of the actors and the style of the film in the exotic backdrops did bring back memories of the film Before Sunrise and Before Sunset, both directed by Richard Linklater, to me. Those two where also interesting films in the romance genre and just as playful as this film though both weren't as complex as the one Kiarostomi has in store.
Abbas Kiarostomi's Certified Copy is without doubt is a film that features some solid writing and inspiring performance. But it does have portions that is likely to bore.

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