Amir Ghavidel (Persian: çàÃÂñ ÃÂÃÂÃÂïÃÂ) (22 March 1947 â 8 November 2009) was an Iranian writer and filmmaker. He started his artistic life at a young age from performing street theatre in his hometown Mashad, before moving to Tehran where he officially started his career in the cinema of Iran. Ghavidel was a screenwriter and director for ten feature films in his career.
Ghavidel started as a screenwriter and an assistant director to Samuel Khachikian for in 1975. He continued to write Agitation (çö÷ñçè) and The South's Shark (éÃÂóààìÃÂÃÂè) and acted as assistant director to Samuel Khachikian for these films in the next three years.
With the Iranian Revolution and the volatile state of cinema in those days, Ghavidel made films based on Iran's post-revolution social and political concerns and established himself as a filmmaker of modern Iranian cinema. He made his first work, Rain of Blood (îÃÂÃÂèçñô) as a documentary feature film produced by Rasul Sadrameli in 1980, one year after the revolution. Faramarz Gharibian won the Crystal Simorgh for Best Actor for two of Ghavidel's films Train (êñÃÂ) and The Misty Harbour (èÃÂïñ ààâÃÂÃÂï), and Majid Entezami was nominated for best film score for Train.
Ghavidel passed away as a result of complications due to liver failure on 8 November 2009 in Tehran.