The Opium of Talibans | |
Director: | Olivier Weber and François Margolin |
Producer: | Odyssée, Margo Films, Sylicone |
Cinematography: | François Margolin and Olivier Weber |
Editing: | Emmanuelle Castro |
Distributor: | Margo Films |
Runtime: | 92 minutes |
Language: | English French Pashto Persian |
The Opium of Talibans (fr|L'opium des talibans) is a 2001 French documentary film and road movie written and directed by Olivier Weber and François Margolin, dealing with the effects of the talibans rule in Afghanistan. It premiered at the 2001 FIPA Festival, and received the Special Prize at the 14th edition of the Festival.[1] [2]
Through interviews with locals, militants, taliban commanders, the film discusses the effects of the introduction of the fundamentalism in Afghanistan.[3] The film also dwells at length, and sometimes with humor, on hypocrisy of this regime, dealing with drugs, opium and heroin. As Mollah Akhunzada, member of the taliban government, says in the film: the talibans send drugs and poisons to other peoples of the planet and non-Muslims. The film shows also the threat on the Buddhas of Bamiyan, threatened by talibans and Al Qaida militants and then destroyed.