Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Cahiers du Cinema | SUPPLÉMENT TURQUIE

Cahiers du cinéma n°647, pp.X-XII

SUPPLÉMENT TURQUIE


C’est un véritable rêve éveillé : avec un top 10 composé à 100 % de films nationaux, le box-office turc 2008 affirme un peu plus l’extraordinaire vitalité d’une production domestique désormais bien installée dans le panthéon mondial…
par Vincent Malausa


C'est un véritable rêve éveillé : avec un top 10 composé à 100 % de films nationaux, le box-office turc 2008 affirme un peu plus l’extraordinaire vitalité d’une production domestique désormais bien installée dans le panthéon mondial (en hausse de 27,59 points par rapport à 2007 avec 60 % de parts de marché). La crise elle-même, qui est sur toutes les lèvres et affecte de nombreux secteurs de l’industrie, semble sans effet sur le phénomène  : en mars 2009, la part de marché des films turcs atteignait le score irréel de 71 %. Un tel miracle ne doit évidemment pas faire oublier le fossé qui sépare les grosses machines sortant sur 350 copies et déplaçant plus de 4 millions de spectateurs (les phénomènes A.R.O.G ou Recep Ivedik) d’une production plus fragile qui doit souvent composer avec les miettes de ce grand festin. Il en va ainsi de ce paradoxe : en Turquie, « la » star des festivals internationaux, Nuri Bilge Ceylan, devrait presque se féliciter d’avoir dépassé la barre des 130 000 spectateurs avec Les Trois Singes, Prix de la mise en scène à Cannes en 2008.
Impossible, donc, de réduire ce régime à deux vitesses à une banale opposition entre cinéma commercial triomphant et cinéma d’auteur balbutiant ou marginalisé. Depuis le milieu des années 1990 et le surgissement de cinéastes de dimension internationale (Ceylan, Zeki Demirkubuz, Derviş Zaim, Yeşim Ustaoğlu…), le cinéma d’auteur turc jouit en effet d’une réputation qui, de succès critiques en coups d’éclat dans les festivals les plus prestigieux (Cannes, Venise, Berlin, Toronto, Rotterdam), ne semble pas faiblir. La situation nationale se partage donc entre deux phénomènes symétriques : un cinéma commercial triomphant mais trop autocentré pour être exportable face à un cinéma d’auteur reconnu à l’étranger mais qui peine à trouver ses marques sur le marché domestique.


L’absence de modèles de production stables est une première explication. Si les films à gros potentiel commercial bénéficient d’une économie presque exclusivement privée (vedettes venues de la télé, sponsors, investisseurs), les films à visée plus artistique (équivalant en gros à notre label « Art et Essai ») se replient en grande partie sur la coproduction et sur les fonds indépendants (Hubert Bals, World Cinema Fund…). « Dans mon cas, la coproduction est vitale et indispensable, explique Reha Erdem, elle permet aux films de trouver les moyens de distribution internationaux qui les font vivre. » Dans ce cadre, le fonds de soutien Eurimages du Conseil de l’Europe, aide à la coproduction, à la distribution et aux salles (20 000 000 d’euros pour 57 films pour la partie coproduction en 2008), fut longtemps décisif pour le cinéma turc, dont 86 films ont été soutenus depuis 1990.


Mais depuis 2005, la création d’un « Bureau général du cinéma et des droits d’auteur » au sein du ministère de la Culture et du Tourisme a quelque peu changé la donne. Accompagnant le « boom » de la production nationale commencé au début des années 2000 (50 films distribués en 2008 alors qu’ils étaient moins de quinze en 2002), ce bureau est un premier pas : aide à la production (avec une moyenne de 150 000 euros par film pouvant monter jusqu’à 250 000 euros), quota pour les premiers films, soutien au développement et à la postproduction dessinent un semblant de modèle qui bénéficie à une trentaine de films par an. Pourtant la situation demeure fragile : « Malgré cet effort, le soutien de l’État n’a pas ouvert le chemin à une politique culturelle stable et multidimensionnelle. Les jeunes cinéastes indépendants doivent toujours s’en remettre à des initiatives individuelles », explique le cinéaste Derviş Zaim. Surtout, le statut de ce bureau lié au gouvernement demeure ambigu. « Ça rend tout très politique. Et comme les responsables sont des bureaucrates faisant plusieurs choses en même temps, le cinéma reste secondaire », note le jeune producteur Emre Yeksan.
Un jeune cinéma turc indépendant s’épanouit néanmoins, rompu aux tournages- guérilla et aux modes de financement aussi complexes qu’aléatoires. « Il y a trois solutions pour faire des films en Turquie, explique Ahmet Boyacıoğlu, secrétaire général de Festival on Wheels. Soit vous êtes un businessman, vous avez un million d’euros et vous réalisez une comédie stupide qui vous en rapporte cinq. Soit vous êtes un producteur ambitieux, prêt à mettre de votre poche, vous cherchez l’aide du ministère, du fonds Eurimages et vous tentez le coup. Soit vous n’avez rien, vous prenez une caméra digitale et vous vous lancez en espérant vous faire remarquer dans un festival. » Cette impression du « tout est possible » tient au fait que le cinéma turc repose sur une économie assez légère. « Avec 150 millions d’euros de recettes pour l’année 2008, nous n’atteignons pas la moitié du chiffre d’affaires des confiseries en France, rappelle le producteur Mehmet Çam. Le budget moyen d’un film tourne autour de 700 000 euros. « Nous avons d’excellents équipements techniques et les coûts sont moins élevés qu’en Europe, renchérit Reha Erdem. Notre système de production est très instable, mais paradoxalement, c’est peut être aussi notre richesse. »


« Le problème vient moins de l’argent que des manques au niveau de la production », explique Aslı Özge, jeune réalisatrice de Men on the Bridge, qui a triomphé au dernier Festival international d’Istanbul. Le flou et la flexibilité des méthodes de production a au moins le mérite de redoubler les énergies. Men on the Bridge s’est mué de documentaire en fiction en cours de route et a pu être produit grâce à un montage remarqué de dix minutes qui a enclenché une suite de réactions en chaîne ; Çağla Zencirci et Guillaume Giovanetti, auteurs du très beau court métrage multiprimé Ata, préparent un film produit entre pas moins de quatre pays : la Turquie, l’Allemagne, la France et… le Pakistan. Quant à Hüseyin Karabey, il a pu réaliser My Marlon and Brando, un des fleurons du jeune cinéma indépendant, en misant tout sur la période d’écriture avant de se jeter à l’eau : « Je n’avais réalisé que des documentaires, c’était le seul moyen pour attirer l’attention. J’ai obtenu plusieurs fonds pour le développement grâce à cette longue préparation. Une fois que j’ai obtenu la moitié du budget, je me suis lancé en espérant obtenir le reste en cours de tournage. »
Dans ce système très libéral, il est quasiment impossible de compter sur les télévisions, les préventes ne concernant que les films commerciaux. « La chaîne publique TRT et la chaîne privée Kanal D ont commencé à acheter des films plus “artistiques” récemment, nuance Emre Yeksan, mais les effets de la crise les ont stoppées dans leur élan. » La distribution, avec environ 1 500 écrans disponibles (fortement concentrés sur Istanbul), bouge elle aussi doucement. Chantier Film, une compagnie habituée à distribuer des films d’art et d’essai européens, a distribué son premier film turc avec My Marlon and Brando récemment. Et le public suit : lors du dernier festival d’Istanbul, tous les films d’art et d’essai ont fait salle comble. Leur image, longtemps résumée à « des films faits pour les étrangers » (Reha Erdem), évolue peu à peu. « Et la plupart des nouveaux cinéastes qui arrivent ont envie de rompre avec l’esthétique minimaliste qui colle trop au cinéma d’auteur », explique Emre Yeksan.
Certes la renommée de Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Zeki Demirkubuz, Semih Kaplanoğlu, Yeşim Ustaoğlu, Reha Erdem, Derviş Zaim et d’autres a contribué à cette avancée. Mais, phénomène plus récent, on note aussi l’apparition de films « intermédiaires  », capables de miser sur le tableau commercial tout en abordant des sujets très sérieux. « Ceylan a eu un rôle décisif, mais il n’est pas seul, explique Ahmet Boyacıoğlu : un cinéaste comme Çağan Irmak a tout changé en réalisant My Father and My Son, un mélodrame qui a fait 4 millions d’entrées en 2005. C’est à ce moment que tout le monde s’est mis à vouloir faire des films. » De fait, il est aujourd’hui possible pour un film d’art et d’essai intermédiaire d’espérer réaliser des scores impensables il y a encore peu, à l’image d’Autumn d’Özcan Alper, qui a attiré plus de 140 000 spectateurs en salles.
Reste un conflit permanent entre les réalisateurs de blockbusters et cette batailleuse nouvelle génération de cinéastes et de producteurs indépendants. « Ils reprochent au cinéma d’auteur d’être aidé sans rien rapporter à l’État », explique Mehmet Çam. En face, Mustafa Altıoklar, réalisateur du premier « hit » du cinéma commercial turc en 1996 (Istanbul Beneath My Wings, 500 000 entrées), fanfaronne : « Les films de Ceylan, je peux en réaliser un toutes les semaines. » Dans ce dialogue de sourds, la solution passerait par un renforcement du corps indépendant via une plateforme d’envergure. « Les manques sont multiples, explique Yamaç Okur, jeune producteur (Summer Book, 2007) : manque de lobbying, manque d’une plateforme qui permettrait de solidariser les réseaux déjà noués, manque de culture nationale cinéphile aussi… Mais nous sommes de plus en plus des producteurs à l’européenne, et non plus de simples producteurs-investisseurs comme dans les années 1990. » Une chose est sûre : fourbissant leurs armes, les jeunes turcs de la génération post-Ceylan ont bien l’intention de conquérir à leur tour leur petit coin de paradis.


> Photo accueil : Des temps et des vents de Reha Erdem (Pretty Pictures)

Monday, July 16, 2012

Turkish Production Houses

35 Milim Filimcilik Yapım ve Dağıtım
Managing Director: Iskender Karakıraz
Address: Istiklal Cad. Erol Dernek Sokak, Erman Han No: 5 Kat 1 D. 4
34433 Beyoglu, Istanbul
Tel: +90 212 251 4616
Fax: +90 212 251 4620
Web Site: www.35milim.net

Akün Film
Managing Director: İsmet Kurtuluş and Süheyla Kurtuluş
Address: Yeşilçam Sok, No: 7/1, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 249 72 45, 245 19 00
Fax: +90 212 249 72 44

Altıoklar Film Prodüksiyon PRO
Managing Director: Mehmet Altıoklar-Emine Altıoklar
Address: Porlak Fırın Sokak No:2 Rumeli Hisarı
Tel: 0 212 358 60 06
Fax: 0212 358 60 11
E-mail: info@altioklar.com

Anka Film
Managing Director: Erhan Özoğul, Funda Ödemiş, Ali Akdeniz
Address: Kuloğlu Mah. Ağa Hamam Cad. No:35-4 Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 245 64 10
Fax: +90 212 245 64 03
E-mail: info@ankafilm.com

Asya Film DIST
Managing Director: Sabahattin Şenyüz, Ali Özgentürk
Address: Gazeteci Erol Dernek Sokak Erman Han No:5-1 Beyoğlu İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 251 41 71
Fax: 0212 293 34 98
E-mail: asyafilm@superonline.com

ANS-PRO
Managing Director: Abdullah Oğuz
Address: Teşvikiye Cad. Teşvikiye Palas Apt. 107-6 Teşvikiye - İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 259 77 85
Fax: 0212 227 56 12
Web Site: www.apooguz.com

Atadeniz Filmcilik PRO
Managing Director: Yılmaz Atadeniz
Address: Çamlık Mevkii Keskin Apt. 12-2 Etiler İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 265 46 07

Atasagun Films DIST
Managing Director: Çağatay Atasagun
Address: Barbaros Sokak 1-23 Küçükyalı-İstanbul
Tel: +90 216 366 20 93
Fax: +90 216 366 20 94
E-mail: ca@atasagunfilms.com

Atlantik Film PRO
Managing Director: Reha Erdem
Address: Üst Veren Sok. No: 2 34330 1. Levent İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 278 36 11
Fax: 0212 278 19 71
E-mail: atlantikfilm@atlantikfilm.com

Avşar Film PRO
Managing Director: Şükrü Avşar
Address: İnönü Cad. No: 61 Gümüş apt. Gümüşsuyu, 8+90, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 251 34 77-78
Fax: +90 212 249 69 32
E-mail: avsarpinema@superonline.com
Web Site: www.avsarfilm.net

Barbar Film PRO
Managing Director: Uğur ve Nejla Derviş
Address: Kemer Hatun Mah. Hammalbaşı Cad. Parma Apt. No: 62-5 Galatasaray
Tel: 0 212 244 51 59
Fax: 0212 244 99 82
E-mail: film@barbarfilm.com

BKM Film PRO/DIST
Managing Director: Necati Doğru, Yılmaz Erdoğan
Address: Maya Meridyen Plaza Ebulula Cad. D: 2 Blok Kat:3 Akatlar - İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 352 18 18
Fax: 0212 351 21 68
E-mail: bkm@bkmonline.com

Belge Film DIST
Managing Director: Sabahattin Çetin, Ayşegül Çetin
Address: Gazeteci Erol Dernek Sok. No: 3-4 Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 252 25 25
Fax: +90 212 251 36 37
E-mail: belgefilm@belgefilm.com

Bir Film DIST
Managing Director: Tunç Şahin, Ersan Çongar, Kemal Ural
Address: İstiklal Cad. Gazeteci Erol Dernek Sokak Erman Han No: 5-5 Beyoğlu - İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 251 82 04
Fax: 0212 251 82 05
Web Site: www.birfilm.com

Böcek Yapım PRO
Managing Director: Ömer Faruk Sorak
Address: Çubuklu Cad. Burunbahçe Mevkii Ağaçlık Mesire Yeri No: D+E Çubuklu İstanbul
Tel: 0 216 680 10 58
Fax: 0212 680 10 59
E-mail: info@bocekyapim.com.tr

Can Uluslararası A.Ş.
Managing Director: Sedat Akdemir
Address: İstiklâl Cad, Fitaş Pasajı, No: 24/26, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 243 20 90
Fax: +90 212 252 98 69

Chantier Films DIST
Managing Director: Metin Anter, Nedim Anter
Address: Mumhane Sokak No: 3 Arnavutköy İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 358 59 59
Web Site: www.chantierfilms.com

Co Production PRO
Managing Director: Zeynep Özbatur
Address: İstiklâl Cad, Anadolu Pasajı No: 201 Kat: 3 D:6 Beyoğlu - İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 251 32 42
Fax: +90 212 249 58 57
Web Site: www.coproduction.com.tr

Dada Film
Managing Director: Murat Toktamışoğlu
Address: Beybi Giz Plaza 6. kat Maslak İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 290 26 80-81

D Production DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Can Anamur
Address: Doğan Tv Center Bağcılar - İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 413 59 59
Fax: +90 212 413 59 99

Dinamo Istanbul
Managing Director: Enis Ozkul
Address: Konaklar Mah. Cinar Sok. No:15 4. Levent / Istanbul
Tel: +90 212 278 91 61
Fax: +90 212 280 91 62
Web Site: www.dinamo-istanbul.com

Eksantrik Film Prodüksiyon Ltd. Şti.
Managing Director: Abdullah Ekşioğlu, Elvin Ekşioğlu
Address: P.K. 112   34725 Kızıltoprak İstanbul Tr.
Tel: +90 216 414 49 36
Web Site: www.eksantrik.com
Faks: +90 216 414 49 98
E-mail: eksantrik@eksantrik.com

Erler Film DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Türker İnanoğlu
Address: Ertürk Sok, No: 5, Kavacık, İstanbul
Tel: +90 216 425 12 50
Fax: +90 216 425 12 60, 425 12 69

Erman Film PRO
Managing Director: Fuat Erman, Ebru Özyurt
Address: Gazeteci Erol Dernek Sokak Erman Han No: 5-5 kat:2 Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 244 32 02
Fax: +90 212 249 51 86
Web Site: www.ermanfilm.com

EPS Filmcilik İç ve Dış Ticaret A. Ş. DIST
Managing Director: Uğur Terzioğlu
Address: Bağdat Cad, No: 97/1, Kızıltoprak, Kadıköy, 34724, İstanbul
Tel: +90 216 414 56 00
Fax: +90 216 414 86 01
E-mail: ugur@epsfinans.com

Evci Film Production
Managing Director: Selim Evci
Address: Istiklal Cad. Mis Sk. Tan Apt. Daire : 6 Kat : 2 34433 Beyoglu, Istanbul
Tel: +90 212 249 5835
Fax: +90 212 249 5834
Web Site: www.evcifilm.com

Feza Film
Managing Director: Mehmet Tanrısever
Address: Hulûsi Noyan Sok, Toprak Pasajı, 3/4, Fatih, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 631 16 08-9
Fax: +90 212 635 16 98

Film Pop DIST
Managing Director: İsmet Kazancıoğlu
Address: Çilekli Cad, No: 12, Sabancı Center Arkası, 3. Levent, 34330, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 324 87 00
Fax: +90 212 244 13 05
E-mail: filmpop@superonline.com
Web Site: www.filmpop.com.tr

Filma-Cass Film PRO
Managing Director: Mine-Ömer Vargı
Address: Dereboyu Cad. G41 Sokak 303-4 Maslak, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 286 09 40
Fax: +90 212 286 20 82

Fono Film STD/PRO
Managing Director: Doğan Okan, Cemal Okan
Address: Yerebatan Cad, Salkım Söğüt Sok, No: 34, Sultanahmet, 34410, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 519 02 67
Fax: +90 212 511 57 99
E-mail: fonofilm@atlas.net.tr
Web Site: http://www.fonofilm.com.tr

Hermes Film PRO
Managing Director: Elif Dağdeviren-"Bülent Helvacı
Address: İhsan Aksoy Sok. 17-2 Çamlık-Etiler İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 265 92 92

IFR PRO
Managing Director: Ezel Akay

Address: Altzeren Sokak No:1 Levent, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 324 76 24
Fax: +90 212 324 76 36

Kala Films PRO
Managing Director: Tamer Üner
Address: Nisbetiye Mah Saydam sok no:10/A 34330 Istanbul
Tel: +90 212 283 52 38
Fax: +90 212 268 65 71
E-mail: info@kalafilm.com
Web Site: www.kalafilm.com

Kaplan Film PRO
Managing Director: Semih Kaplanoğlu
Address: Teşvikiye Süreyya Ağaoğlu Sok. Ihlamur Yolu Hatay apt. 41-7, Teşvikiye İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 246 05 05
Fax: +90 212 291 29 95

Kara Film DIST
Managing Director: Bahattin Serter - Temel Kerimoğlu - Zafer Çevik
Address: İstiklâl Cad, Halep İşhanı No:40 Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 244 81 23

Karma Film PRO
Producer: Diloy Gülün
Address: Adalı Fettah sok No:7 Arnavutköy 34345 İstanbul
Tel: 0 212 257 0915, 0212 257 0133
Fax: 0212 257 0862
E-mail: diloy@karma-films.com
Web Site: www.karma-films.com

Kılıç Film
Managing Director: A. Erol Kılıç
Address: Gazeteci Erol Dernek Sok, No: 15, Dalyan Han, K: 2-3, Beyoğlu, 34433, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 245 15 84, 249 58 04
Fax: +90 212 244 16 12
E-mail: aek@kilicfilm.com.tr
Web Site: www.kilicfilm.com.tr

Mag Multimedya DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Mehmet N. Karaca, Burçin Özmert
Address: TOBB Binası Talatpaşa Cad. No: 3 Kat:11 İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 283 62 82
Fax: +90 212 283 40 66

Medyavizyon DIST
Managing Director: Fatih Oflaz
Address: Cumhuriyet Cad, No: 26, Pegasus Evi, K: 4, Harbiye, 34367, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 296 05 05
Fax: +90 212 296 65 67
Web Site: http://www.medyavizyon.com.tr

Med Yapım PRO
Managing Director: Fatih Aksoy
Address: TOBB Binası Talatpaşa Cad. No:3 Kat:9 İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 283 62 71
Fax: +90 212 283 62 81

Mine Film PRO
Managing Director: Kadri Yurdatap
Address: Ayhan Işık Sok. No:28-4 Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 243 02 00
Fax: +90 212 245 67 74

Motion Films PRO
Producer: Tuba Güvelioğlu, Seçil Avunya
Address: İstiklal cad. Hidivyal Palas No:465 Kat:4 Taksim, Istanbul
Tel: +90 212 292 07 60
Fax: +90 212 292 07 62
E-mail: tuba@motion-films.com, secil@motion-films.com
Web Site: www.motion-films.com

Özen Film DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Mehmet Soyarslan
Address: Sakızağacı Cad, No: 21, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 293 70 70/71
Fax: +90 212 244 28 51

Pi Film DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Ceyda Tufan
Address: İstiklal Cad. Arda Apt. No:471-3 Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 292 04 10
Fax: +90 212 292 30 67

Pinema Filmcilik ve Sinemacılık Tic. Ltd. Sti. DIST
Managing Director: Pamir Demirtaş
Address: Akatlar Mah, Zeytinoğlu Cad, Yeşim Sok, No: 17, Etiler, 34335, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 352 21 73/4H
Fax: +90 212 352 21 78
Web Site: www.pinema.com

R Film DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Ömer Rıza Çam
Address: Aydın Sokak No:2-6 Levent - İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 282 83 29
Fax: +90 212 282 83 32

Sinema Ajans PRO
Managing Director: Mesut Uçakan
Address: Şehit Muhtar Cad. No: 41-3 Beyoğlu İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 361 75 45
Fax: +90 212 361 72 46

Sır Film PRO
Managing Director: Burcu Aykar
Address: Darüşşafaka Mah. Açelya sok. Seba Koru Sitesi Bblok 2 Daire:2 İstinye, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 328 05 98
Fax: +90 212 286 45 22

STV DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Osmantan Erkır
Address: Fügen Sokak No:7 İç Levent İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 270 16 89
Fax: +90 212 269 26 68

Sunar Film
Managing Director: Mahmut C. Saraçer
Address: İstiklâl Cad, İpek Sok, No: 3/1, İpek Han, Küçükparmakkapı, 80080, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 293 30 18
Fax: +90 212 251 69 40

TMC PRO
Managing Director: Erol Avcı
Address: Gazeteciler sitesi dergiler sok. No.29-7 Esentepe İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 288 92 60
Fax: +90 212 288 92 71

UIP Filmcilik DIST
Managing Director: Mehmet Nuri Özduygu
Address: Spor Cad, Acısu Sok, No: 1/8, Tahsin Bey Apt, 80200, Maçka, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 227 82 05/06
Fax: +90 212 227 82 07
E-mail: mehmet_ozduygu@uip.com
Web Site: http://www.uip.com.tr

Umut Sanat Filmcilik ve Sinemacılık DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Nida Karabol Akdeniz
Address: Akasyalı Sok, No: 18, 4. Levent, 80650, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 325 88 88
Fax: +90 212 278 32 82
E-mail: infoumut@umutsanat.com.tr
Web Site: www.umutsanat.com.tr

UNP Filmcilik ve Sinemacılık Tic. Ltd. Sti.
Managing Director:
Address: Akatlar Mah, Zeytinoğlu Cad, Yeşim Sok, No: 17, Etiler, 34335, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 352 21 73/4H
Fax: +90 212 352 21 78

Warner Bros. DIST
Managing Director: Haluk Kaptanoğlu
Address: Cumhuriyet Cad, Pegasus Evi, No: 26, K: 5, Harbiye, 80200, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 219 20 30
Fax: +90 212 219 20 32
E-mail: haluk.kaplanoglu@warnerbros.com

Yalan Dünya Ltd. PRO
Managing Director: Gülen Güler Hurley
Address: Asmalımescit Mah. Sofyalı sok. İliç İşhanı 18-18 Tünel Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 245 90 34
Fax: +90 212 245 90 32

Yeni Güven Film
Managing Director: Kemal Gül
Address: Yeşilçam Sok, No: 17/1, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 244 58 94
Fax: +90 212 251 13 40

Yeni Tual Film DIST
Managing Director: Mustafa Cemal Tual
Address: Yeşilçam Sok, No: 27/1, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 243 41 06, 249 75 97
Fax: +90 212 293 86 47

Pegasus
Managing Director: Deniz Ziya Temeltaş
Address: Açık Türbe 39-5 Üsküdar - İstanbul
Tel: +90 216 495 05 39
Fax: +90 216 391 50 79

Calinos DIST
Managing Director: Melih Fırat Gülgen
Address: Gümüşsuyu Mah. İnönü Cad. Mithatpaşa Apt. No:92-94 İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 243 64 40
Fax: (90 212) 249 74 08
E-mail: calinos@calinos.com

Özel fx PRO SPECIAL EFFECTS
Managing Director: Tarkan Özel, Cem Özel
Address: Büyükdere Cad. Yonca Apt. No:151 C blok K:4 Daire:40 Zincirlikuyu- İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 275 39 67
Fax: +90 212 275 39 66
E-mail: sfxtarkan@yahoo.com

Mediamax A.Ş. DIST/PRO
Managing Director: CEO, Ayşe Medran Director of Int Business, Emre Mumcuoğlu
Address: Gül Sokak, No: 5 Levent 34330 Istanbul
Tel: 0212 281 2722
Fax: 0212 283 6735

Arzu Film PRO
Managing Director: Ferdi Eğilmez
Address: 5. Gazeteciler Sitesi Akasya Sok. A-4 blok No: 1 Akatlar - İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 270 76 03
Fax: +90 212 270 76 02
E-mail: info@arzufilm.com

Plato Film PRO
Managing Director: Sinan Çetin
Address: Akyol Cad. Vişne Sk. No:14/2 Cihangir-İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 252 45 83
Fax: +90 212 249 35 84
E-mail: sinanc@platofilm.com

Sinevizyon Film San. Tic. Ltd. PRO
Managing Director: Biket İlhan
Address: Coşkun Sok, No: 3/4, Cihangir, 80060, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 251 22 95
Fax: +90 212 251 79 53

Sugar Workz DIST
Managing Director: Murat Şeker, Hülya Şeker
Address: Şehbender Sokak 4-4 Kat:3 Asmalımescit- Beyoğlu-İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 245 99 31

Animart
Managing Director: İlker Güler
Address: Yıldız Posta Cad. Vefa Bey Sokak Yeşil apt. No:26 K.11 D:23 Esentepe-İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 272 22 82
Fax: 0212 211 52 68
E-mail: ilker@animart.org

Sera Film Services DIST
Managing Director: İdil Urfalıoğlu
Address: General Yazgan Sokak 10-15 Tünel Beyoğlu İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 292 76 93
Fax: +90 212 292 36 11, 0533 310 55 51

Broadcast Entertainment DIST/PRO
Managing Director: İnci Gülen
Address: Nüzhetiye Caddesi No:44 E blok Beşiktaş İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 227 92 74
Fax: +90 212 227 49 69
E-mail: i.gulen@broadcast.com.tr

Filmciler
Managing Director: Berna Parlak
Address: Akyol Caddesi Vişne Sokak 14-2 Cihangir- İSTANBUL
Tel: +90 212 252 45 83
Fax: +90 212 249 35 84
E-mail: bernap@filmciler.com

Pana Film PRO
Managing Director: Raci Şaşmaz
Address: Fener Kalamış Cad. No:8 Kızıltoprak - Kadıköy - İstanbul
Tel: +90 216 550 19 10
Fax: +90 216 550 19 14
E-mail: info@panafilm.com

Metro Film
Managing Director: Selim Kafalı
Address: Sadri Alışık Cad. Anadolu Sokak No: 2 Beyoğlu İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 244 10 62

Film Sokağı Studios PRO
Managing Director: Gencer Bavbek
Address: Atatürk Oto Sanayi, 2. Kısım, Rentaş İş Merkezi, K: 5, Maslak, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 286 44 82
Fax: +90 212 276 32 70
E-mail: filmsokagi@superonline.com

Bugay Film Yapım PRO
Managing Director: Umur Bugay
Address: Türkgücü Cad, No: 53-55/3, Atlas Apt, Cihangir, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 244 03 50
Fax: +90 212 245 29 28
E-mail: bugay@iris.com.tr

Delta Film
Managing Director: Metin Erarabacı
Address: İstiklâl Cad, Bekâr Sok, No: 12/1, Beyoğlu 80080, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 252 79 13 - 14
Fax: +90 212 249 89 94
E-mail: deltafilm@turk.net

Magnum Film PRO
Managing Director: Tunç Başaran<
Address: Ayanoğlu Cad, No: 54/2, Fenerbahçe, İstanbul
Tel: +90 216 330 77 74
Fax: +90 216 302 72 65
E-mail: tuba@netone.com.tr

Mavi Film Yapım
Managing Director: Mustafa Güneş
Address: Sivritaş Sok, No: 6/6, Ortaklar Apt, Mecidiyekoy, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 272 94 32
Fax: +90 212 266 66 05

NBC Ajans PRO
Managing Director: Nuri Bilge Ceylan
Address: Başkurt Sok, No: 43/4 , Cihangir, Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 249 69 62
Fax: +90 212 293 10 08
E-mail: nbceylan@turk.net

Pan Film PRO
Managing Director: Ali Akdeniz
Address: Sıraselviler, Soğancı Sok, 19/17, Cihangir, 80060, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 251 04 63
Fax: +90 212 244 24 47
E-mail: panfilm@panfilm.com.tr

Penta Film
Managing Director: Turgay Aksoy
Address: Gazeteci Erol Dernek Sok, Erman Han Kat 4, D 10 Beyoğlu, İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 251 09 80
Fax: +90 212 249 84 10, 233 18 56

Promete Film San. Tic. Ltd.
Managing Director: Cengiz Ergun
Address: Bağdat Cad, Selçuk Sindal Sok, No: 3/8, Feneryolu, 34724, İstanbul
Tel: +90 216 550 69 22
Fax: +90 216 550 69 30
E-mail: info@prometefilm.com

Tara Production DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Fatma Şapçı
Address: Ihlamur Yıldız Caddesi No:10 Beşiktaş
Tel: +90 212 259 57 57
Fax: +90 212 258 45 30

Energy Media DIST
Managing Director: Selay Oğuz Tozkoparan
Address: Hazine Sok. No:1 Ortaköy-İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 259 96 94
Fax: +90 212 259 95 57
E-mail: info@energymedia.com

Filma DIST
Managing Director: Selay Oğuz Tozkoparan
Address: Zeytinoğlu Cad. Sarı Konaklar İş Merkezi A Blok D.6 34335 Akatlar İSTANBUL
Tel: +90 212 352 09 60
Fax: +90 212 352 09 65
E-mail: info@filma.com.tr

Cinemedia PRO
Managing Director: Aslı Kocaoğlu
Address: Meşrutiyet Cd. No:162 K:2 D:3 Tünel Beyoğlu / İSTANBUL
Tel: +90 212 245 37 60 -61
Fax: +90 212 245 37 62
E-mail: info@energymedia.com

Limon Production PRO/DIST
Managing Director: Hayri Aslan
Address: E.İsmail Hakkı Bey Sk. No: 3 Balmumcu Beşiktas 34349 İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 347 34 50
Fax: +90 212 266 10 86
E-mail: info@limonproduction.com

Eflatun Film DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Birol, Muzaffer Kayıkçı
Address: İ.M.Ç.6.Blok No:6539 Unkapanı 34470 İstanbul - Türkiye
Tel: +90 212 511 67 26
Fax: +90 212 511 67 27
E-mail: eflutan@eflatunfilm.com

Denk Ajans DIST
Managing Director: İrfan Demirkol
Address: Tunalı Hilmi Cad. No:105/3 Kavaklıdere Ankara
Tel: +90 312 466 40 00
Fax: +90 312 466 44 92
E-mail: info@denk.com.tr

Tiglon DIST/PRO
Managing Director: Ela Sevinç
Address: Dereboyu Cad Meydan Sk No: 28 Beybi Giz Plaza K:6 No: 19-20 34398 Maslak / İSTANBUL
Tel: +90 212 290 37 37
Fax: +90 212 290 37 38
E-mail: info@tiglon.com.tr

Most Production PRO
Managing Director: Mustafa Oğuz
Address: Eğlence Sokak No.6 Arnavutköy / İSTANBUL
Tel: +90 212 257 62 00
Fax: +90 212 265 61 49

Gold Film PRO
Managing Director: Faruk Turgut
Address: Karanfil Caddesi Geyikli Sokak No:1 Levent / İSTANBUL
Tel: +90 212 281 09 00
Fax: +90 212 281 01 99
E-mail: info@goldfilm.com.tr

FM Production PRO
Managing Director: Faruk Bayhan-Mustafa Oğuz
Address: Beyazgül Cad. No:38 Arnavutköy / İSTANBUL
Tel: +90 212 257 62 00
Fax: +90 212 265 61 49
E-mail: farukbayhan@fm.com.tr

Sanmal
Managing Director: Ersin Pertan
Address: Veli Alemdar Han No:428 Rihtim Caddesi Karakoy/ISTANBUL 80030
Tel: + 90 212 244 3416
Fax: +90 212 251 8329
E-mail:sanmal@superonline.com


TFT Yapım
Managing Director: Ayfer Özgürel
Address: Ömer Avni Mah. Balçık sok.No4/1 Gümüşsuyu/İstanbul
Tel: +90 212 249 57 77-78
Fax: +90 212 249 57 79
E-mail:ayfer@tftyapim.com

Monday, June 25, 2012

Village Voice review | Men on the Bridge


Village Voice review
Men on the Bridge
By Mark Holcomb Wednesday, Jun 20 2012


Raw yet respectful and tenderly observed, this feature-film/documentary hybrid from writer-director Asli Özge plops a trio of real-life Istanbulites into a fictionalized account of their lives to engage the maddening flux of present-day Turkey and, by extension, modernity itself. All three protagonists—impoverished street peddler Fikret, unhappily married taxi driver Umut, and Murat, a lonely, low-level traffic cop—work near the Bosphorus Bridge, a looming and perpetually snarled symbol of the abundance promised but rarely delivered by the upward mobility each compulsively pursues. That makes Men on the Bridge sound stuffier than it is: For all of its big ideas, which Özge deploys with remarkable grace, it's the film's small moments that linger, including a pair of excruciating first dates for Murat (subbing for his real-life cop brother, who was unable to appear due to Turkish law) and a heartbreakingly near-comic attempt by Fikret to hold down a busboy job. The running argument between Umut and his grasping wife, Cemile, is downright troubling, genuine or not (the nonprofessional leads are so adept, it's hard to tell) and suggests a tragedy unspecific to any single culture. Like cities and bridges, people who graze but never grasp their private dreams abound; capturing their lives with vision and compassion is a feat.


Men on the Bridge
Directed by Asli Özge
Endorphine Production
Opens June 20, MOMA, Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Review | Men on the Bridge

Movie Review
Working-Class Men, Longing for Change in a Restless Land
‘Koprudekiler’ (‘Men on the Bridge’), a Drama Set in Istanbul
Endorphine Production

Fikret Portakal in “Koprudekiler” (“Men on the Bridge”), set in Istanbul. The title characters are linked by the long hours they spend on the Bosporus Bridge.
By ANDY WEBSTER
Published: June 19, 2012

There’s palpable verisimilitude in Asli Ozge’s “Koprudekiler” (“Men on the Bridge”), a powerful portrait of working-class Istanbul that artfully suggests a wellspring of found moments. Quietly, steadily, it gathers a resonance belying its slice-of-life scale.
More About This Movie

Initially intent on a documentary, Ms. Ozge wrote a script influenced by the lives of her cast members (mostly nonactors, all convincing). The uneducated Fikret, a teenager who illegally sells roses in traffic, aspires to a steady job but flails briefly as a busboy. Trapped in a life of Dumpster-diving subsistence, he finds comfort only in hip-hop.

Umut, married to the restless Cemile, drives a cab in sometimes 24-hour stretches. Against a backdrop of Western-style advertisements and television images, the couple struggle, confined by gender roles and a lack of education.

Murat is a nationalistic policeman in search of a spouse online. What links the men are the long hours they spend on the Bosporus Bridge, the grindingly congested suspension bridge linking Europe and Asia.

Murat, an observant Muslim, regards the Kurdistan Workers’ Party as a terrorism organization and wants its members barred from Parliament; his dates with women are fraught with agonizing pauses and his self-centered utterances.

At a Republic Day parade, Fikret and his friends watch military jets overhead and a procession of tanks. “I wish there was a war,” a friend says, more for employment, you suspect, than for patriotism. Cemile seeks only independence for herself.

Everywhere in Istanbul, it seems, there is a longing, a need for change in a country balanced precipitously between East and West, and past and future.

Koprudekiler

Opens on Wednesday in Manhattan.

Written and directed by Asli Ozge; director of photography, Emre Erkmen; edited by Vessela Martschewski, Aylin Zoi Tinel and Christof Schertenleib; produced by Fabian Massah and Ms. Ozge. At the Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters, Museum of Modern Art. In Turkish, with English subtitles. Running time: 1 hour 27 minutes. This film is not rated.

WITH: Fikret Portakal (Fikret), Murat Tokgoz (Murat), Umut Ilker (Umut) and Cemile Ilker (Cemile).

Thursday, June 07, 2012

In memoriam: Seyfi Teoman | Kenji Ishizaka


In memoriam: Seyfi Teoman, film director
  
Seyfi Teoman, the promising young film director from Turkey, passed away on May 18th at the age of thirty-five. He had been in hospital since April, after being involved in a motorbike accident. Words cannot express my sadness at this sudden tragic news.

Born in 1977, Mr. Teoman studied in Poland, where he attended the prestigious National Film School in Lodz, whose alumni include Andrzej Wajda, Roman Polanski, and Jerzy Skolimowski. He attracted early attention with his graduation film, the short feature Apartment (2004) and from the outset of his career he established close links with TIFF. His first feature film Summer Book was entered in the Winds of Asia-Middle East Section at TIFF in 2008, while in 2011 his second film Our Great Despair was also screened in this section.

Summer Book is the tender portrayal of the gradual maturing over the period of one summer of a shy young boy living in a provincial city, in the course of his relationships with various people. The film marked the emergence of yet another directorial talent from the burgeoning Turkish film scene, which has been in the ascendancy since the dawn of the twenty-first century. When I heard the director say on a visit to Japan that his greatest influences were Taiwanese new-wave directors such as Hsiao-Hsien Hou and Edward Yang, it dawned on me that the hero Ali was a junior version of Tung-Tung or Yang-Yang.

Although only it was his second directorial film, Our Great Despair was selected for the Berlin International Film Festival Competition. The film portrays the changes that occur when a pretty female university student comes to lodge for free in a house occupied by two dull forty-something men, presenting in detached fashion the chemistry that gradually develops and the changes in the relationships between the three protagonists. With most of the action taking place indoors, the narrative is tranquil and unemotional. The director’s ability to quietly captivate the audience using only a combination of the view of the dining table and the dialogue around it between the protagonists is nothing short of remarkable. To draw again on examples from Taiwan, I felt that the sensibilities exhibited by this film clearly bore a direct relation to A Confucian Confusion (1994) and Mahjong (1996), and that somehow Mr. Teoman was turning into a director more akin to Yang than to Hou. Indeed, I recall a conversation with Yoshihiko Yatabe, the director of the TIFF Competition section and a self-confessed fan of Mr. Teoman, in which he remarked that Mr. Teoman would likely become a maestro of the “lovable loser” genre.

He had embarked last year on a second career as a producer and with eyes agleam had excitedly told me that he was full of ideas for new projects. His untimely death thus comes as a terrible shock. I am proud, however, to have been involved in introducing Summer Book and Our Great Despair to Japan.

I pray that his soul may rest in peace.


Kenji Ishizaka
Programming Director
Winds of Asia-Middle East Section
Tokyo International Film Festival

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Cannes 2012 | Short and Sweet but Not "Silent"

From awards ceremony at Cannes 1724 GMT: 
Kylie presents the Short Film Palme d'Or, to Turkey's L Rezan Yesilbas for "Sessiz-Be Deng/Silent." The screening at Cannes marked Silent’s world premiere. Silent won production fund from Ministry of Culture of Republic of Turkey It won Akbank Short Film Competition “Best Film Prize” in Turkey, as well.


Mavi Boncuk |
Sessiz Fiction/ 14'21'' / HD / Color / 2011 
Directed/Written/Produced by: L. Rezan Yeşilbaş;  Cinematography by: Türksoy Gölebeyi;  Edited by: Buğra Dedeoğlu, L. Rezan Yeşilbaş; Sound: Furkan Atlı;  Cast: Belçim Bilgin, Cem Bender 












SYNOPSIS 


The year is 1984. Zeynep, who lives in Diyarbakır with her three children, wants to visit her husband in prison. Zeynep is only able to speak her mother tongue ‘Kurdish’; however, only the Turkish language is allowed to be spoken in prison, so she’s unable to utter a word there. On the other hand, she wants to bring a new pair of shoes to her husband but it’s forbidden to bring anything to prisoners from outside… 


Directors Comment
The film takes place in Diyarbakır in 1984, it is about a young woman who wants to visit her husband in prison. Yesilbas says about the film: “The prison of Diyarbakır, the setting of the story, is like the symbol of the torture experienced in the prisons in Turkey afer the coup d’etat of 1980. However, in this story, I did not choose to tell the things that took place in the prison, or the political prisoners or the torture, or the political fight. Instead, I turned my camera to the little stories of the “silent” women outside the prison, who could not speak another language than Kurdish, which was forbidden in the prisons of that era.” 


Biography 
Born in 1977, he graduated from the Cinema-TV department of Marmara University in 2008. His short film “Hüküm” ( Judgement) was the first film of his “ Trilogy of Women”. Hukum has been screened in many national and international film festivals. He shot “Sessiz/Be Deng” (Silent) in 2011 which is the second film of the trilogy. He has also written the script of the third film of the trilogy. L.Rezan Yeşilbaş also works as the assistant of Turkish director Zeki Demirkubuz since 2008. 
E-Mail: rezanyesilbas@gmail.com


Filmography 
2012 YERALTI (Underground) Zeki Demirkubuz  Feature 
as First Assistant Director 

2011 Sessiz / Be Deng Short Film (feature) 14'21'' 2008 
as Director Scriptwriter 

2011BABAMIN SESİ (VOICE OF MY FATHER) Orhan Eskiköy/ Zeynel Doğan Feature 
as Executive Producer 
2010 UNUTMA BENİ İSTANBUL (DON’T FORGET ME İSTANBUL) Multiple directors  Feature 
as Executive Producer 
2008KISKANMAK (ENVY) Zeki Demirkubuz Kara Film Feature 
as Executive Producer 
2008 HÜKÜM (THE JUDGEMENT) Short Film (feature) 35m 2008 
as Director Scriptwriter 


Contact L.REZAN YESILBAS - ikbaliye mah. zeamet sok. gul apt. d.2 no26 acibadem kadikoy Turquie - T : +90 555 300 0300 Press: Beyza Karayel +90 538 519 98 99 rezanyesilbas@gmail.com www.rezanyesilbas.com

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

New Turkish Cinema in Warsaw

New Turkish Cinema in Warsaw, 
24 - May 30, 2012
On 24-30 May 2012 in Warsaw, will be organized by the Society for Culture and Arts Magic Lantern [1].


In addition to presenting examples of award-winning New Turkish Cinema,  a Film Market will be held, where leading representatives of the Polish film industry will be able to meet with Turkish artists.


Mavi Boncuk |







In Cinema Muranów Polish film lovers will have the opportunity to watch the following films: "Love in a different language"( Baska Dilde Ask ), "The tragic history of Celal Tan and his family" (Celal Tan ve Ailesinin Aşırı Acıklı Hikayesi ), "What is left" ( Geriye Kalan ),"Jealousy" ( Kıskanmak ), "Cosmos" ( Cosmos ), "Night of Silence" (Lal Gece ), "Pomegranate" ( Nar ), " dot " ( nokta ), "Another prayer"( Uzak İhtimal ) and "Ekotopia" ( Entelköy Efeköy'e Kars ) .


The Turkish Film Week in Warsaw will host the: Reis Celik, Director , " Night of Silence " ( Lal Gece )  , actress Lale Mansur of  "Love in a different language" ( Baska Dilde Ask ) , Zeki Demirkubuz, director of " Jealousy " (Kıskanmak ) znd actor Serhat Tutumluer the producer of the film "Ekotopia" (Entelköy Efeköy'e Kars) Muharram Gülmez and producer of "pomegranate" (Nar) Turker Korkmaz . Turker Korkmaz will also be a guest of the Film Market.


[1] The Magic Lantern Culture and Arts Association 
Society for Culture and Arts Magic Lantern Büyülü Fener Kultur Sanat Dernegi (BFKS) led by Irfan Demirkol was founded in the spirit of the idea of "globality" of art and the fact that it is "common language" for the world. The organization brings together people looking at the world differently, for many years creating and operating in different fields of art such as in literature, photography and cinema. The Society organizes seminars and cultural and artistic events, and promotes art and culture of Turkey both at home and abroad. The works are supervised by the Society headquarters in Ankara.

Monday, May 21, 2012

'Can' Opens the Space Between


'Can' Opens the Space Between -- A Panorama of Cinema in Turkey


I was very proud when my film Can was the first film from Turkey to be shown at the recent Sundance Film Festival where it received the "World Cinema Dramatic Special Jury Prize for Artistic Vision." This recognition further established Turkish films as a powerful voice in world cinema.


Can tells the story of a couple, Ayşe and Cemal, who long to have a child. I wanted to explore the somewhat desperate steps a man and woman facing infertility will take in order to create a family. My characters chose to fake a pregnancy and decide to buy a child, which turns their lives into a living hell. Is it a form of insanity to bring a new life into the world? Can anything ever prepare us for the struggle of becoming parents?


Left alone with her new baby, Ayşe is despondent and depressed. No matter how hard she tries, she cannot accept that she is now a mother. We assume that the maternal instinct is so strong that it will eventually overcome any obstacles. But what if a mother can't bond with her baby, particularly when that child is not her own flesh and blood?


My couple finds themselves completely alone dealing with circumstances they could never have predicted. All their lives they have been taught that having a child and being a parent fulfills a fundamental need to be part of a society's great plan for all of us. But what if that plan fails and all that is left is an aching void?


As in many cultures, family is extremely important in Turkey. My film raises the questions: are we ever really prepared to create a family? Does society pressure us to have a child and then offer no help when we are overwhelmed and distraught over this new responsibility?


It is my hope that Ayşe and Cemal's story of deception, passion, doubt and ultimately acceptance of the faults we all share as human beings will resonate with American audiences.


Now Can will open "The Space Between: A Panorama of Cinema in Turkey," the largest retrospective of Turkish films in the United States, which opens on April 27th at the Walter Reade Theater in New York.


I am grateful to Richard Peña, the Programming Director of the Film Society of Lincoln Center, who chose my film along with 28 others to be part of this landmark event, which spans seven decades of Turkish films. My countrymen at the Moon and Stars Project of The American Turkish Society, which organized the program, deserve my thanks as well.


Born in Izmir in 1969, Raşit Çelikezer directed his feature debut Three Apples Fell from the Sky in 2008 to critical acclaim at film festivals throughout the world. His film Can will be shown on April 27th at 6:30 p.m. as part of The Space Between: A Panorama of Cinema in Turkey presented by The Moon and Stars Project, the cultural division of the American Turkish Society, and co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Polluting Paradise: Cannes Review


Environmental doc is explicitly much more a campaigning tool than any kind of objective reportage.


Prolific Turkish-German auteur Fatih Akin aims to raise a stink with Polluting Paradise, a heartfelt documentary chronicling the environmental mismanagement blighting his grandparents' home village. 


Co-produced by a German TV channel, this is informative, ire-stoking but formally conventional small-screen fare whose only theatrical prospects are domestic, where Akin's ensemble comedy Soul Kitchen was 2009's second-biggest home-grown hit. Exposure abroad via eco-themed festivals and networks will nevertheless flow from an Out of Competition premiere at Cannes, where Akin's 2007 The Edge of Heaven took Best Screenplay.
Akin is quite unusual among major European film-makers in that he's harvested such major awards -- including Berlinale's Golden Bear for Head-On -- and critical praise as well as significant box-office success. An occasional documentarian, whose non-fiction movies tend to spring from his features, he now uses his status as a bully-pulpit to help raise awareness of a specific issue unfolding over the last half-decade on the Black Sea coast.
PHOTOS: Cannes 2012: Opening Night Gala
Polluting Paradise (Müll im Garten Eden), filmed over the last five years since Akin came to the area to shoot parts of Edge of Heaven, is thus explicitly much more a campaigning tool than any kind of objective reportage. It's evident that Akin is firmly on the side of the villagers in Çamburnu, a picturesque settlement located beneath lush tea-growing slopes. In 2007 a former copper-mine a couple of miles uphill was turned into an enormous landfill for the entire Trabzon province's trash - amid much local protest. The opposition has remained vociferous over the years -- thanks partly to the powerful stench emitted by the supposedly "odorless" garbage and, even more economically damaging, the deleterious effect on streams and the water-table.
Often working in collaboration with local-historian Bünyamin Seyrekbasan, whose photographs and video-recordings comprise an exhaustive and invaluable archive of the case, Akin sympathetically catalogues the complaints of numerous residents. Crucially, Akin and his collaborators obtain great access to the site and its surroundings, frequently happening to be in the right place at exactly the right time. They can thus capture the often-fraught encounters between the locals and the hapless functionaries tasked with operating and maintaining this deeply unpopular facility -- images of which are often given a sinister cast by the thriller-type stylizations of Alexander Hacke's over-used score.
The village's mayor is also a frequent on-camera presence, having pluckily spearheaded resistance to a scheme devised and implemented by the seldom-seen officials of the regional and national government. Mouthpiece for the latter is the plant's blandly reassuring manager ("the earth will sort it out") - but Polluting Paradise never quite manages to point a steady finger of blame at any one individual or department, and there's no indication that Akin tried to contact higher-up decision-makers.
Then again, a confrontational, attention-hogging Michael Moore approach clearly isn't his style -- as well as an amplification of grievances, Polluting Paradise is often a lyrical tribute to places and people with whom the Hamburg-raised director evidently feels a strong affinity. Akin's own family left Çamburnu long ago, of course -- and the village's population has been quickly dwindling as young people seek better opportunities and less smelly surroundings. Their relocation to Turkey's major cities -- whose own infrastructure is thus placed under extra stress - is symptomatic of a planet-wide flight from the rural to the urban. And it's sobering to reflect that there are probably hundreds of Çamburnus all around the world, small-scale eco-disasters proceeding far the purviews of world cinema's beady eyes.
Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Out of Competition - Special Screenings), May. 18, 2012.
Production company: Corazón International, in coproduction with NDR and Dorje Film
Director / Screenwriter: Fatih Akin
Producers: Fatih Akin, Klaus Maeck, Alberto Fanni, Flaminio Zadra, Paolo Colombo
Directors of photography: Bünyamin Seyrekbasan, Hervé Dieu
Music: Alexander Hacke
Editor: Andrew Bird
Sales Agent: The Match Factory, Cologne
No rating, 97 minutes.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Read BFI Report with Turkey in Mind


Read BFI Report with Turkey in Mind


Read Report PDF




New Horizons for UK Film: A consultation on the BFI Future Plan 2012-2017
The BFI has launched a four-week consultation on its Future Plan for 2012-2017 and you are invited to take part.


New Horizons for UK Film outlines the BFI's proposals for investing Lottery support for UK film and sets out a fresh agenda to capitalise on British creativity and talent.


The proposals cover a wide range of activities for supporting filmmaking, production, development, exhibition, education, skills development and film heritage - with a central focus on building audiences across the UK and on all platforms.


The consultation is open from 14 May to 10 June.



Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Seyfi Teoman: ‘You can’t have it both ways’




Seyfi Teoman has only presented his sophomore directing effort this year; nonetheless, he has learned a lot about the film distribution business in the process.
The young filmmaker behind the drama “Bizim Büyük Çaresizliğimiz” (Our Grand Despair), which had its world premiere earlier this year at the Berlin film festival, says filmmakers should settle for “success either in film festivals or at the box office.”


“If your [film] has drawn 5 million viewers [in the box office], you shouldn’t set your sights on collecting all the movie awards. If your film received a certain number of awards and is honored by festivals, you shouldn’t anticipate 5 million viewers,” said Teoman, a member of the İstanbul-based independent and arthouse filmmakers collective Yeni Sinema Hareketi (New Cinema Movement), during an interview this week with the Anatolia news agency.


Teoman made a successful foray into film directing in 2008 with his drama “Tatil Kitabı” (Summer Book), which premiered at that year’s Berlin film festival. The film went on to win numerous awards both nationally and internationally as well as being featured in several international film festivals abroad.


The 33-year-old director also said in the interview with Anatolia that the reception for arthouse films was the same all around the world. “All films that have a universal content and are made with no commercial concerns … receive the same reaction throughout the world, which is low box-office returns. But there might be exceptions to this,” he said, noting that “Sonbahar” (Autumn), Özcan Alper’s directorial debut, and “İki Dil Bir Bavul” (On the Way to School), a documentary that recounts a school year in a Kurdish village in southeastern Turkey, were examples of such exceptions.


“Films that have a certain political content but that at the same time do not compromise cinematic quality have reached a certain success in the box office, because politics is important in people’s lives,” he said. “If Yeşilçam is the descendant of commercial cinema, we represent the other cinema. We are the heirs of Yılmaz Güney,” he added.


Source: 3 May 2011 / TODAY’S ZAMAN WITH WIRES., İSTANBUL

In Memoriam | Seyfi Teoman (1977-2012)


In Memoriam | Young Turkish movie director Seyfi Teoman (1977-2012) passed away in Istanbul today. Seyfi Teoman, who had a motorcycle accident on his birthday on April 16 in Istanbul’s Bakırköy neighborhood, was being treated in the intensive care unit of Istanbul University’s Faculty of Medicine hospital. Teoman, 35, was diagnosed with a cerebral hemorrhage and  his health condition stayed as serious. 


Mavi Boncuk |


Seyfi Teoman (1977-2012)


After his first film “Tatil Kitabı” (Summer Book), Teoman’s second film “Bizim Büyük Çaresizliğimiz” (Our Grand Despair) competed at the Berlin International Film Festival Berlinale last year for the Golden Bear. 


He won the Jury Special Prize and the Best Director of Photography Award at the 30th Istanbul Film Festival, as well as the Best Film Award and Cinema Critics Award at the 16th Nurnberg Turkey-Germany Film Festival. 


Teoman was also among the producers of the film “Tepenin Ardı” (Beyond the Hill), which won the Golden Tulip Award at the 31st Istanbul Film Festival on April 15. 


After studying economics at Bogaziçi University, Teoman lived in Lodz in Poland for two years, studying film directing at the Polish National Film School, where his tutor and supervisor was acclaimed Polish director Mariusz Grzegorzek. He shot his graduation movie, Apartman (Apartment) in 2004.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Tribeca 2912 | Beyond the Hill

Beyond the Hill
Release Year: 2012
Runtime: 94 Minutes Directed by: Emin Alper

SYNOPSIS

In the quiet foothills of Turkey, Faik lives an isolated existence. When his second son brings his boys for a visit, Faik takes the opportunity to pontificate about the law of the land, as he sees it. He shares one unsolicited thought after the next, most particularly focusing on the elusive nomads whom he suspects have been trespassing on his property. The day and night wear on, and each member of the clan takes his turn entrusting the film's audience with his own dark secret.


In his feature debut, Emin Alper demonstrates a level of skill and subtlety in execution that earns him the distinction of a talent to watch. His use of space and setting creates a strikingly ominous narrative out of the simplicity of topography and facial expression. These landscapes—whether Faik's hills or a twisting grimace in close-up—become the driving dramatic forces within the story. Masterfully evoking tension through isolation, landscape, and unspoken conflict, Alper conveys that what lies beyond the hill may be far less damaging than what is within your walls.

--Ashley Havey

Saturday, April 28, 2012

2012 | Araf by Yeşim Ustaoğlu

Written & directed by: Yeşim Ustaoğlu [1] ; Cinematographer: Michael HammonSound Engineer: Bruno Tarriere; Produced by: Ustaoglu Film (Turkey), CDP (France), The Match Factory (Germany)Produced by: Ustaoğlu Film (Turkey), CDP (France), The Match Factory (Germany) | Format: 35mm / color / Turkey / Germany / France 2012 Original Language: Turkish 
Match Factory | Araf  Site
Cast: Özcan Deniz, Neslihan Atagül, Barıs Hacıhan, Ilgaz Kocatürk, Nihal Yalçın


ARAF - SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN is the story of Zehra (18) and Olgun (18) whose lives are caught in a vacuum. They both work 24 hour shifts in a large motorway service station. The world in which they live and work is a place of throwaway culture and constant change. They too are waiting for a chance to change and escape from their empty, monotonous lives.


When Zehra is not working, she spends her life in front of the TV. She dreams that one day she will escape her dull surroundings and go far away to live a glamorous life and fall wonderfully in love like the characters she sees on the box. Zehra's colleague Olgun, who is wildly in love with Zehra and doesn't give up trying to impress her, also has big plans for his life: He wants to get rich quickly by winning a TV gameshow and become a power- ful and impressive man.


Zehra and Olgun share the same TV-fuelled dreams. But one day their lives are turned upside down, when Zehra falls passionately in love with a lorry driver, Mahur (38), who arrives at the petrol station during the winter. While Zehra discovers her own body, sexual powers and self- confidence through her affair with Mahur and starts to slowly lose her girlish innocence, Olgun, who is troubled by this change in Zehra, starts to try more outlandish stunts, inspired by those he has seen on TV, to make himself a local hero and win her back.


When Zehra learns that she is pregnant, she tries to protect her unborn child within a very conservative society and she learns that only she can take responsibility for her life and decide on its' direction. Olgun's violent reaction, brought about by his incredible disappointment and wounded pride at this news, lands him in prison.


After some time though, he learns the meaning of true love and selflessness. Over the course of the film young Zehra and Olgun grow up and learn the stark truths of life eventually embrac- ing each other and discovering a way out of this 'Araf,' or 'somewhere in between,' albeit ending up very far from their initial dreams...


[1]  After making several award-winning shorts in Turkey, Yesim Ustaoglu made her feature film debut in 1994 with THE TRACE. She received international recognition for her JOURNEY TO THE SUN (GÜNESE YOLCULUK). In competition at the Berlin Film Festival in 1999, it received the Blue Angel Award (Best European Film) and the Peace Prize. The moving story of a courageous friendship undaunted by political cruelty, JOURNEY TO THE SUN swept the Istanbul Film Festival by winning Best Film, Best Director, the FIPRESCI Prize and the Audience Award. Her third film, WAITING FOR THE CLOUDS, the story of a woman forced to live for 50 years with the haunting secrets of a hidden identity, was awarded NHK Sundance - International Film-maker's award and thus established a strong reputation for the director. With her fourth film, PANDORA'S BOX, the story of an old woman suffering from Alzheimer disease, Turkish filmmaker Yesim Ustaoglu won the Best Film and Best Actress award in San Sebastian in 2008, con- tinued to travel many international festival and was also released theatrically in many countries. 

Friday, April 27, 2012

Review | Turkish history without subtlety


Turkish history without subtlety
By Mark Jenkins
Friday, Apr. 27, 2012


"Making history is no job for cowards," announces the hero of "Fetih 1453," a Turkish war epic that's awash in virility. Even the movie's principal female character, who poses as a guy to help her adoptive father build state-of-the-art cannons, exemplifies manly virtue.


Battle flicks are big on bravery, of course, and this account of the Turkish conquest of Constantinople doesn't stint on courageous self-sacrifice. For every soul-stirring clash, however, there's at least one laugh-out-loud moment. Making history may require only bravado, but making historical movies demands subtlety as well.


The 1453 fall of Constantinople, legend has it, was foretold by Muhammad. So the movie begins with the announcement of Islam's prophet - not actually shown, since that would be blasphemous - that the Orthodox Christian city will fall. It's left to young Sultan Mehmet II (Devrim Evin), a classic overachiever, to fulfill the prediction some 800 years later.


"Fetih 1453" was cut by 25 minutes for American release, but there are still plenty of preliminaries. Relying heavily on CGI, director Faruk Aksoy swoops from Mehmet's court to Constantinople, Genoa, the Vatican and other grand places, introducing the political powers that support or,, more likely, oppose the sultan's ambitions. When the locale is Christian, the filmmakers helpfully emblazon just about every piece of clothing and furniture with a cross.


The combat scenes that rouse the last third of the movie employ thousands of people (or their digital avatars). But, like most such epics, "Fetih 1453" focuses on just a few players. In addition to Mehmet, there's his friend and sword-fighting coach Hasan (Ibrahim Celikkol), an exemplary warrior who's guaranteed the spotlight during the final battle.


Hasan loves Era (Dilek Serbest), who was sold into slavery but freed by weapon-maker Urban (Erdogan Aydemir). Era keeps spurning Hasan's proposals, but once they become comrades in arms, her attraction to him grows. There's even a kiss, although the movie is careful about such things. Scantily clad dancing girls are kept on the Christian side of the beaded curtain, and Mehmet is reduced to a single wife. (The historical sultan had a few more.)


The movie's English subtitles sometimes fail it, and perhaps some wit was lost in translation. Given the stilted acting, though, it seems likely that the dialogue is just as clunky in the original. Even Turkish audiences probably giggle when Mehmet solemnly instructs troops headed to a brutal war to "have a safe trip."


Contains bloody violence. In Turkish with English subtitles.

Wednesday, March 07, 2012

31. Istanbul IFF | National Competition Films

The programme of the 31st Istanbul Film Festival was announced on Wednesday, 7 March at the press conference held in İKSV Salon. Speakers during the press conference were İKSV Chairman of Board of Directors Bülent Eczacıbaşı, Akbank General Manager Hakan Binbaşıgil and Assistant Director of the Istanbul Film Festival Kerem Ayan.


The festival programme presents a rich content to cinephiles as always. The festival will meet the audience this year with a wide spectrum selections expanding new feature movies of 2011 and 2012, unforgetable classic movies, and masterpieces of master directors, movies having world premieres in Sundance in January and in Berlin in February, National Golden Tulip, International Golden Tulip and FACE Human Rights Competitions, documentaries, and children movies. “Cinema and Music” section planned for the 40th year of İKSV as well as new sections like “Filming Revolution”, “What’s Happening in Greece?” and “A Chinese Film Tradition: WuXia”, “Within the Family” and 15-hour-long special view of Mark Cousins’s The Story of Film: An Odyssey stand out in the festival. The Special Prize of the Jury, which was supported with a monetary award for the first time in 2011, will come to be distributed by Efes this year. Among the films partaking in the Golden Tulip National Competition, the director of the film to win the Special Jury Prize in the memory of Onat Kutlar, will be awarded 30,000 US Dollars by Efes to be used in his/her next film.  



This year, the Golden Tulip International Competition Jury will be led by renowned director Nuri Bilge Ceylan, who lately won the Special Jury Prize in Cannes Film Festival with his latest film Once Upon A Time in Anatolia. In addition to the Golden Tulip as the Grand Prize of the festival, the jury will also present a director the Special Prize of the Jury for exceptional achievement. The International Competition will be supported by a total of 25,000 Euro monetary prizes to be given by the Eczacıbaşı Group in the memory of Şakir Eczacıbaşı. Of this total amount, 10,000 Euros will be given to the Turkish distributor of the film to earn the Golden Tulip Best Film award.


NATIONAL COMPETITION


Meanwhile, the Golden Tulip National Competition Jury will be headed by poet and writer Murathan Mungan, whose several works have been adapted to theater. Mungan was also the screenwriter of Dağınık Yatak / An Untidy Bed by Atıf Yılmaz, considered a cult film by many. Lead by Mungan, the jury will hand out nine awards including the Best Turkish Film, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Actor, Best Screenplay, Best Director of Photography, Best Music, Best Editing, and Special Prize of the Jury.


The film to be selected as the Best Turkish Film will be awarded 150,000 TL, and the Best Director will be awarded 50,000 TL. The Best Actress and Best Actor will be awarded 10,000 TL each.



31.  Istanbul IFF | National Competition Films 
March 31-April 15, 2012


(World Premiers) 
Ben Uçtum, Sen Kaldın / Mizgin Müjde Arslan
Ana Dilim Nerede? / Veli Kahraman
Şimdiki Zaman / Belmin Söylemez
Ferahfeza / Elif Refiğ


(National Premiers) 
Tepenin Ardı / Emin Alper 
Lal Gece / Reis Çelik
Babamın Sesi / Orhan Eskiköy & Zeynel Doğan


and in competition


İz-Rêç / M. Tayfur Aydın   
Can / Raşit Çelikezer 
Yeraltı / Zeki Demirkubuz 
Nar / Ümit Ünal