Friday, April 29, 2005

BALANCE AND MOVEMENT / BALANS VE MANEVRA (2004)


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BALANCE AND MOVEMENT / BALANS VE MANEVRA
Director: Teoman
Cast: Burak Sergen, Bülent Kayabaş, Erol Demiröz
Turkey, 2005
35 mm. / Color / 90’
Turkish; English s.t.

MULTI-TALENTED ARTIST TEOMAN'S FIRST FEATURE BEHIND THE CAMERA. A woman in love, a weak man, a theoretically perfect father stumbling in emotions, an uncle dependent to the past, an adolescent meet at Zagor's boarding house. Characters who are together but lonely brush each others tangentially. The lovers (Timur-Zeynep), father and son (Timur-Captain), platonic loves (Ruhi's to Zeynep), brothers (Captain-Nihat) try to live (and sometimes die) crashing the walls. Love, communication gaps, guilt, genetics, and surely, lots of self-deception.



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Thursday, April 28, 2005

DARK FACE OF THE MOON /AYIN KARANLIK YÜZÜ (2005)




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DARK FACE OF THE MOON /AYIN KARANLIK YÜZÜ

Director: Biket İlhan
Cast: Ali Poyrazoğlu, Sanem Çelik, Memet Ali Alabora
Turkey-Greece, 2005
35 mm. / Color / 90’
Turkish; English s.t.

TRAGIC TALES OF LOSERS AND THOSE WHO HAVE NO CHOICE BUT LOSING; FROM THE VETERAN TV AND CINEMA DIRECTOR BIKET İLHAN. Four adventurous men who have escaped from prison, the historic artifact smuggler, the bank swindler, honor murderer and the hired gun find refuge in an island. While they confront their pasts, one of them crosses paths with an islander lady, and they passionately fall for each other.


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Yolda (2005)


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Yolda
Director: Erden Kıral
Cast: Halil Ergün, Yeşim Büber, Serdar Orçin
TURKEY-BULGARIA, 2005
35 mm. / Color / 90’
Turkish; English s.t.
"I HAVE COMPOSED THIS STORY WITH INSPIRATION FROM A JOURNEY I MADE WITH YILMAZ GÜNEY. IT IS BASED ON REAL LIFE EXPERIENCE. BUT I HAVE TILTED AND TWISTED THIS EXPERIENCE. YOLDA IS A FILM ABOUT FREEDOM AND CAPTIVITY", says the director Erden Kıral. During military rule, Yılmaz, a legendary filmmaker, is transferred to another prison. During the journey, his wife, a friend of his from prison and a young director follow him in a car. The cars stop at a motel for the night. Here, the young director, himself wanting to break free of the prison of his own making, confronts his master, but actually he is still very much under his master's influence.


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ERDEN KIRAL

He studied ceramics at the İstanbul Academy of Arts. He has written on film for newspapers and magazines. Bereketli Topraklar Üzerinde / On Fertile Lands, won the Best European Film Award in Strasbourg; Hakkari’de Bir Mevsim / A Season in Hakkari, received the Silver Bear, FIPRESCI, CICAE and Otto Dibelis awards at Berlin Film Festival; Ayna / The Mirror was nominated one of the “10 Best Films of All Times” by the European magazine. He made nine award-winning feature-length cinema films. He has been a member of Berlin Akademie der Künste since 1984.
Filmography
1978 Kanal

1980 Bereketli Topraklar Üzerinde
1983 Hakkâri’de Bir mevsim
1984 Ayna1987 Dilan
1988 Av Zamanı
1993 Mavi Sürgün
1999 Avcı
2005 Yolda

TOSS UP / YAZI TURA (2004)


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TOSS UP / YAZI TURA
Director: Uğur Yücel
Cast: Kenan İmirzalıoğlu, Olgun Şimşek, Bahri Beyat
Turkey, 2004
35 mm. / Color / 110’
Turkish; English s.t. 2
004 Best Film; Best Director; Best Screenplay; Best Editing; Best Music; Best Actor (Olgun Şimşek); Best Supporting Actor (Bahri Beyat); Best Supporting Actress (Eli Mango)


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THIS "TOUGH GUY" FILM, SHOT IN A DRAMATIC DOGMA STYLE AND THAT DOES NOT RESERVED IN SHARING ITS RAGE, IS CENTERED AROUND THE ARMED CONFLICTS IN SOUTEASTERN TURKEY THAT COST TEN THOUSANDS OF LIVES, AND TELLS TWO STORIES SET IN 1999: From Göreme, "Devil" Rıdvan, and from Istanbul, living with his father, "Ghost" Cevher. They had fought in the southeast together, Rıdav had lost his leg, found out that all that he had left back in his town had changed completely, and lost his dreams. Cevher, has lost his right ear. But to follow is the devastating Marmara earthquake.

PARDON (2005)


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PARDON
Director: Mert Baykal
Cast: Ferhan Şensoy, Rasim Öztekin, Ali Çatalbaş
Turkey, 2005
35 mm. / Color / 94’
Turkish; English s.t.

BASED ON A TRUE STORY, PARDON IS A BLACK COMEDY THAT DEALS WITH A CHAIN OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS SPARKED BY A SERIES OF JUDICIAL AND POLICE ERRORS. Three friends leading ordinary, common lives are mistakenly taken under custody. Following the advice of the police officers, they take on certain unclaimed crimes, and are sent to prison right away. As their hopes of being released wither, they reluctantly adapt to prison life. The screenplay of young director Mert Baykal's debut feature is written by Ferhan Şensoy who also takes the lead role.


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BORROWED BRIDE / EĞRETİ GELİN (2005)


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BORROWED BRIDE / EĞRETİ GELİN
Director: Atıf Yılmaz
Cast: Müjde Ar, Metin Akpınar, Nurgül Yeşilçay, Onur Ünsal, Fikret Hakan, Füsun Demirel, Şevket Çoruh
TURKEY-GREECE, 2005
35 mm. / Color / 117’
Turkish; English s.t.

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IN THE FIRST YEARS OF THE REPUBLIC, A WOMAN FALLS IN LOVE WITH A YOUNG MAN, DEFYING TRADITION AND HER WORD. The latest film of veteran director Atıf Yılmaz, tells the tale of the "borrowed bride" Emine who is hired to tutor the young and playfully naïve Ali before he gets married to his fiancée. Emine accepts the offer to be a "borrowed bride" before her lover Hasan gets out of jail. But love takes no notice of Hasan, or tradition, and they become lovers, against all odds. Müjde Ar and Atıf Yılmaz meet again in this "poetic, local, and different world with fantastical elements."
ATIF YILMAZ
Born in 1926 in Mersin. He is a director, scriptwriter and producer. He began to write theater and film critics while studying at the Academy of Fine Arts in Istanbul. He started his cinema career with writing scripts for films by early 1950s. His first directorial debut was with the feature Kanlı Feryat in 1952. His first non-commercial feature Gelinin Muradı made in 1957, received good reviews and gave him the opportunity to attempt at more experimental screenplays and films. He made more than 100 feature films many of which he also wrote their screenplays and produced. Many of his films were screened at international festivals such as Venice, Berlin, Munich, Valencia, London and Montreal and received awards. Retrospectives of his works have been held at four international festivals, most recently the 2001 Montpellier Festival of Mediterranean Film.

Selected Films
1957 Gelinin Muradı
1959 Bu Vatanın Çocukları
1964 Murad’ın Türküsü
1966 Keşanlı Ali Destanı
1977 Selvi Boylum Al Yazmalım
1980 Adak
1982 Mine
1984 Bir Yudum Sevgi
1985 Dul Bir Kadın
1986 Aahh Belinda
1986 Adı Vasfiye
1987 Hayallerim, Aşkım ve Sen
1990 Berdel
1992 Düş Gezginleri
1994 Gece, Melek ve Bizim Çocuklar
1997 Nihavend Mucize
1999 Eylül Fırtınası
2004 Eğreti Gelin

DERIVATIVE (2005)


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DERIVATIVE
Director: Ulaş İnaç
Cast: Güçlü Yalçıner, Gülçin Santırcıoğlu, Beste Bereket
Turkey, 2005
DigiBeta / Color / 91’
Turkish; English s.t.

AN ADAPTATION OF THE STORY "THE NOVEL OF THE CURIOUS IMPERTINENT" INCLUDED IN CERVANTES' "DON QUIXOTE", IN A REALISM SUGGESTED BY "DOGMA" FILMS, DERIVATIVE TELLS THE TALE OF TWO WOMEN AND A MAN. The advertising professional Nâzım, wealthy Süreyya with no aim in life but getting married, and the cinema student Burcu who has to prepare a graduation thesis. Nâzım suggests Burcu to prepare a unique report while Süreyya who plans to marry Nâzım has another proposal to make to Burcu: To seduce Nâzım in order to test his loyalty. Replete with lies, love and desire, Derivative is young filmmaker Ulaş İnaç's debut feature.

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The film will be shown in Cordoba and Granada in June within a program that compiles adaptations from Cervantes and Don Quixote, organised by the Andalucian Cinematheque.

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ANGEL’S FALL / MELEĞİN DÜŞÜŞÜ (2004)

ANGEL’S FALL / MELEĞİN DÜŞÜŞÜ
Director: Semih Kaplanoğlu
Cast: Tülin Özen, Budak Akalın, Musa Karagöz, Engin Doğan, Yeşim Ceren Bozoğlu, Özlem Turhal, Can Kolukısa
TURKEY-GREECE, 2004
35 mm. / Color / 98’
Turkish; English s.t.

SHARING THE BEST FILM AWARD WITH HIS DEBUT FEATURE AWAY FROM HOME, COMES A METROPOLITAN DRAMA THAT TRACKS THE LOST SOULS OF THE CITY. Zeynep has to put up with his father's abuses at night, and during the day, she confronts with the romantic approaches of her only friend Mustafa. On the other part of the city, Selçuk grieves his newly deceased wife. A suitcase full of her clothes will change Zeynep's life unexpectedly.

This film was screened at the 55 th International Berlin Film Festival's Forum section.


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BOATS OUT OF WATERMELON RINDS (2003)

BOATS OUT OF WATERMELON RINDS (2003)
Karpuz Kabugundan Gemiler Yapmak
2004 - Turkey - Drama
Type: Features
Release Date: January 1, 2003
Rating: NR
Running Time:
97 minutes
Ziya Uner - Executive Producer
Diloy Gulun - Producer
Figen Ermek - First Assistant Director
Ilker Berke - Cinematographer
Ahmet Ulucay - Screenwriter, Director
Mustafa Preseva - Editor
Senad Preseva - Editor
Serdar Tahiroglu - Producer, Executive Producer
Ender Akay - Sound/Sound Designer, Composer (Music Score), Executive Producer
Cast:
Ismail Hakki Taslak
Kadir Kaymaz
Gulayse Erkoc
Boncuk Yilmaz
Hasbiye Gunay
Mustafa Coban
Fizuli Caferov
Ahmet Ulucay
Aysel Yilmaz

More...



L'EMPIRE DES LOUPS / Empire of the Wolves (2005)


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İSTANBUL TALES / ANLAT İSTANBUL (2005)


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İSTANBUL TALES / ANLAT İSTANBUL
Directors: Ümit Ünal, Kudret Sabancı, Selim Demirdelen, Yücel Yolcu & Ömür Atay
Cast: Altan Erkekli, Mehmet Günsür, Çetin Tekindor, Azra Akın, Yelda Reynaud, Güven Kıraç, Nurgül Yeşilçay, İdil Üner, Fikret Kuşkan
Turkey, 2005
35 mm. / Color / 100’
Turkish; English s.t.


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İSTANBUL TELLS HER OWN FAIRY TALES... A GIPSY CLARINET PLAYER AS THE PIED PIPER, LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD AS A MOB COURIER WHO'S JUST GOT OUT OF JAIL... Cinderella, an ill-fated prostitute in love with an innocent youngster.... A princess, "the fairest of them all" escaping from her executioner encounters the eighth dwarf in the jungle that is Beyoğlu... A broke Kurdish youth who's just arrived in İstanbul, meets Sleeping Beauty... The five stories of İstanbul Tales, written by Ümit Ünal, are told with surprising integrity by five directors. These five separate stories are interconnected with mathematically well structured transitions. – Mehmet Bilâl

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Saturday, April 23, 2005

Article | Fight the power

Fight the power

Islamic film-makers have always had to subvert the rules of clerics and censors. It's what makes them some of the world's best directors, says Tariq Ali

Saturday April 23, 2005
The Guardian


It is as difficult to define or classify Islamic cinema as it would be a Christian, Jewish or Buddhist one. The language of cinema has always been universal. Interpretations vary. Censors had different priorities: in 1950s Hollywood a married couple could not share a double bed and had to be clothed. In South Asia, the censor's scissors clipped out kisses from western films. The birth of commercial and art movies did not remain confined in the west for too long.

The Lumière brothers first exhibited moving pictures in Paris in 1896. A year later there was a private showing at the Yildiz palace in Istanbul. The viewers consisted of the Ottoman Sultan/Caliph - the temporal and spiritual leader of Sunni Islam - and a few selected courtiers. In 1898 the Ottoman public was let in on the secret and there was a screening in the beer hall in Galatasaray Square. During the next decade cinema halls sprouted like wild mushrooms, and audiences in Istanbul and Smyrna flocked to see everything. Cultural repression began soon after the first world war in 1919: Ahmet Fehim's films were considered politically provocative and censored by the British occupying authorities.

With the birth of post-Ottoman Turkey, the new industry found a staunch supporter in Latifa Usakligil, the feminist wife of Kemal Ataturk (the marriage lasted two years, from 1923-25). Where Istanbul led, Cairo followed. And Bombay was not far behind. Muslim stars dominated the formative years of Bollywood even though, like Jews in Hollywood, many changed their names to appease the dominant Hindu population. Yusuf Khan became Dilip Kumar, Meena Kumari was once Mahajabeen and it was an Afghan woman, Mumtaz Begum, who entranced audiences as Madhubala. Alone among his colleagues in defying convention, the popular comic actor, Badrudin Kazi, mocked the studio bosses by adopting the Christian name of a much-favoured imperial tipple: Johnny Walker.

When Pakistan was carved out of India's rib in 1947 it was assumed by some that Bollywood's Muslim stars would defect to the new state and thus boost the Lahore film industry. But Lollywood did not happen. The Pakistan government decided to help its cinema by banning film imports from India. The result was a disaster. Commercialism stifled creativity. Since nobody could see Indian movies, Pakistani producers shamelessly plagiarised the Bombay original. Nor could Pakistan produce anything that even remotely resembled the work of Satyajit Ray or Mrinal Sen. Then in the late 1950s and 60s, the military rulers sealed off the country from "subversive" influences. Hollywood reigned supreme.

A decade later, when Pakistan had its first secular, elected, civilian government, women were encouraged to study and seek employment, but the cinema remained heavily veiled. It had little to do with Islam as such, since the same postcolonial rules were in operation in neighbouring India. On-screen kisses were forbidden. Bosoms could heave but had to be carefully covered and, even at the beach, actresses had to swim fully clothed. Cinema proprietors in Pakistan decided to spice their shows with a "tota" (strip). In Lahore, touts would parade outside some movie theatres and whisper to bystanders that a "one-minute strip" was being shown at the late-night performance. The prowling males would pack the show and halfway through some boring movie, a minute or two of porno-flicks would appear on the screen. After this the cinema emptied.

That was a long time ago. Pakistani movies are still awful. A new low point was reached in 1990 with International Guerrillas , which glorified jihadi militarism and vilified Salman Rushdie - the equivalent of Hollywood trash depicting Muslims as terrorists. The "plot" centered on a gang of Islamist Pakistanis who raid the secure facility where Rushdie is being kept safe. Much violence follows, but the evil Rushdie is killed through divine intervention. The film was a box-office flop. More popular were the porn DVDs that are easily available. Their procurers do a roaring under-the-counter trade, particularly in Islamist strongholds like Peshawar and Quetta. Unsurprisingly, a fair proportion of the bearded militants who spend the day painting veils on billboard actresses, settle down that same evening to watch some comforting porn.

It's different in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, where only last year the censors passed Arisan . The film's plot revolves around an architect's eventual coming out as a gay man. The censors passed a movie depicting male homosexuality and featuring a gay kiss, without exciting a backlash from local clerics. Likewise in Tajikistan, where Djamshed Usmonov's latest film, Angel on the Right , depicts sexual, social and political frustrations (affairs, drunkenness, corruption) without any problems. The style of his films, strongly influenced by Soviet film schools, reflects the strengths of that tradition.

It is clerical Iran that has produced the most vibrant and remarkable cinema of today. Not since the French New Wave have auteurs from a single country dominated the art-cinema market. Compelled by circumstances (like their Communist bloc counterparts of the 1960s) to rely on symbolism and allegory, Iran's film-makers have produced a varied range of high-quality cinema. One reason for this is the rich intellectual tradition in the country that transcended the kitsch world of the Shah as well as bearded puritanism. The novels of Sedagh Hedayet - especially his masterwork The Blind Owl - had a Kafkaesque quality: his heroes are intense loners, floundering in a sea of anguish, remote from those who rule the country. Ahmed Shamlu's poetry was more optimistic in tone, but staunchly oppositional. These writers influenced many of Iran's film-makers - before and after Khomeini's triumph.

Abbas Kiarostami, the father of the Iranian New Wave, is a graduate of the Teheran University's faculty of fine arts and sees cinema as an art form no different from a painting or a sculpture. Landscape and architecture are as important as the actors. Each viewing uncovers something new. The end is usually enigmatic. Different interpretations are always possible. In Taste of Cherry (1997) a man is trying to commit suicide, but in a calm and dispassionate fashion. When the censors objected, Kiarostami explained that the movie was really about the different choices involved in living out each day. The suicide was incidental. Not exactly my reading of the movie.

The cinematic language and interior destiny of each Iranian film-maker is different, the international influences on them vary from Rossellini to Fellini, Akira Kurosawa to Hou Hsiao-hsien, but there is a strong sense of solidarity. Even the self-contained Makhmalbaf family sees itself as part of a larger community. They view and comment on each other's work, they help each other artistically and politically.

Jafar Panahi latest film, Crimson Gold , illustrates the process. Panahi was on his way to Kiarostami's exhibition of photographs when he heard of a double killing that had taken place that day in an upmarket jewellery store in Teheran. He was so upset that he left the exhibition. Later he and Kiarostami excavated the story behind the incident. Why had a poor, demobilised veteran from the Iran-Iraq war, now turned pizza delivery man, shot a jeweller and then taken his own life? Kiarostami agreed to write the script for Panahi. The result is a neo-realist masterpiece, where fragments taken from a raw reality are seen in relation to the overall class structure of contemporary Iran.

Jafar Panahi is, in some ways, Iran's most fearless film-maker. In The Circle he depicted the oppression of women with a rare sensitivity. The religious police are back in action in Crimson Gold , waiting to pounce on unmarried young women on their way out of a mixed party where we can see them, silhouetted against the window, dancing and enjoying themselves. It is this daily interference in social relations between the sexes that has completely alienated young people from the clerics. Although, as Crimson Gold reveals, underlying all this is a society where the divide between rich and poor increases every month.

Kamal Tabrizi's Marmoulak (The Lizard), released in the UK this week, satirises the mullahs. A convict (known as "the Lizard") escapes from a prison hospital disguised as a mullah. He takes the train to a border town where they are expecting a new mullah. The Lizard has watched enough Iranian television to pick up the clerical style, but he becomes an ultra-humanist cleric, encouraging doubt, analysing Tarantino movies, both surprising and delighting his audience. This film slipped through the censors and played to packed cinemas throughout the country. When mullahs began to be addressed publicly as lizards a panic gripped the cultural establishment and the film was rapidly withdrawn.

This independent, critical school of non-conformist Iranian film directors has risen up against falsehood and irrationality, producing a cinema that has no rivals in the west today. And religion? It is visible in many guises in some of these films, but never centre stage and never official.

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Fatih Akin's Crossing the Bridge at Cannes Film Festival

Hamburg based director Fatih Akin will present his documentary about popular Turkish music "Crossing the Bridge" at Cannes Film Festival which will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage.

Film | Crossing the Bridge (2005)


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Crossing the Bridge
Deutschland 2004/2005, Dokumentary
Director Fatih Akin :Director of photography Hervé Dieu (also Asst. camera in Solino and Gegen die Wand);Editing Andrew Bird ;Sound Johannes Grehl ;Sound mixer Alexander Hacke ;Music Alexander Hacke ;Music (other) Klaus Maeck (Musik Consultant) ; Participation Alexander Hacke
Additional Titles Crossing the Bridge (Originaltitel, DE) ;Production company intervista digital media GmbH (Hamburg) (also produced Ayse Polat’s En Garde) in co-production with Corazón International (Hamburg) ;Producer Fatih Akin, Klaus Maeck, Andreas Thiel, Sandra Harzer-Kux, Jeanette Würl
Line producer Tina Mersmann ; Funding FilmFörderung Hamburg GmbH (Hamburg), Nordmedia Fonds GmbH
Istanbul Shoot: 01.07.04
Format DV - transfered to 35mm
Picture/Sound Color, Dolby
Author and Director: Fatih Akin

Length: 92 minFormat: 35 mm, color, aspect ratio 1:1,85Sound: DOLBY Digital EX 5.1
Year of Production: 2005
Release Date: 09.06.2005
Release Soundtrack: 06.06.2005

World Press Agent: RICHARD LORMANDworld cinema publicityCellphone +33 6 0949 7925Phone +33 1 4804 5173Fax +33 1 4804 8043
www.filmpressplus.com
German Press: boxfish filmsBüro für Film + KommunikationKaren RudolphSenefelderstrasse 2210437 BerlinGermanyPhone +49 30 44 044 751Fax +49 30 44 044 691Email: rudolph@boxfish-films.dewww.boxfish-films.de
World sales: Bavaria Film International / Dept. of Bavaria Media GmbHThorsten RitterBavariafilmplatz 882031 GeiselgasteigGermanyPhone +49 / 89 / 64 99 26 86Fax +49 / 89 / 64 99 37 20Email: bavaria.international@bavaria-film.dewww.bavaria-film-international.de
GERMAN DISTRIBUTOR: PICTORION PICTURES GmbHAn der Hasenkaule 1-750354 HürthGermanywww.das-werk.deandNFP marketing & distribution*Henriette GotautKurfürstendamm 5710707 BerlinGermanyPhone +49 / 30 / 32 909 - 413Fax +49 / 30 / 32 909 - 419Email: H.Gotaut@NFP.dewww.nfp.de

Fatih Akin Nominated for David of Donatello

David of Donatello (the Italian Oscars) announced that Hamburg based German-Turkish film Director Fatih Akin was nominated for THE BEST EUROPEAN FILM with " LA SPOSA TURCA/ Head On" (BIM)

SACRED HEART (CUORE SACRO)


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SACRED HEART (CUORE SACRO) (ITALY)
A Medusa Film release of a Tilde Corsi/Gianni Romoli production, in association with Medusa Film. (International sales: Celluloid Dreams, Paris.) Produced by Tilde Corsi, Gianni Romoli.
Directed by Ferzan Ozpetek. Screenplay, Gianni Romoli, Ozpetek. Camera (color), Gian Filippo Corticelli; editor, Patrizio Marone; music, Andrea Guerra; production designer, Andrea Crisanti; costume designer, Catia Dottori; sound (Dolby Digital), Marco Grillo; casting, Pino Pellegrino. Reviewed at Fiamma, Rome, Feb. 21, 2005. Running time: 116 MIN.

(See:VARIETY REVIEW by DEBORAH YOUNG Feb 28 '05)

Irene Ravelli, played by Barbora Bobulova. Having successfully followed in the footsteps of her entrepreneurial estate agent father, she discovers a part of herself that had stayed hidden up until now, removed.

Her path to self discovery starts in an old building belonging to the family and the characters populating the drama include two old aunts, (Lisa Gastoni and Erica Blanc), a priest (Massimo Poggio) and a tramp (Andrea Di Stefano).

Ferzan Ozpetek's social drama "Sacred Heart" and Giovanni Veronesi's romantic comedy "Manual of Love" lead the race for Italy's Davide di Donatello film awards, with 12 nominations each.

BEST FILM "CUORE SACRO/Sacred Heart" by Ferzan OZPETEK
Produced by Tilde Corsi and Gianni Romoli (R&C Produzioni)

BEST DIRECTOR Ferzan OZPETEK
BEST SCREENPLAY Gianni ROMOLI, Ferzan OZPETEK

Barbora Bobulova in Sacred Heart
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BEST ACTRESS Barbora BOBULOVAB
EST ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE Erica BLANC
BEST ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE Lisa GASTONI
BEST FILM MUSIC Andrea GUERRA
BEST EDITING Claudio DI MAURO,Patrizio MARONE
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Gianfilippo CORTICELLI
ART DIRECTION Andrea CRISANTI
COSTUME DESIGN Catia DOTTORI

Profile | Fatih Akin (1973- ....)

Fatih Akin was born in 1973 in Hamburg of Turkish parentage. He began studying Visual Communications at Hamburg's College of Fine Arts in 1994. His collaboration with Wueste Film also dates from this time. In 1995, he wrote and directed his first short feature, Sensin - You're The One! (Sensin - Du bist es!), which received the Audience Award at the Hamburg International Short Film Festival. His second short film, Weed (Getuerkt, 1996), received several national and international festival prizes. His first full length feature film, Short Sharp Shock (Kurz und schmerzlos, 1998) won the Bronze Leopard at Locarno and the Bavarian Film Award (Best Young Director) in 1998. His other films include: In July (Im Juli, 2000), Wir haben vergessen zurueckzukehren (2001), Solino (2002), the Berlinale Golden Bear-winner and winner of the German and European Film Awards Head-On (Gegen die Wand, 2003), and Crossing the Bridge - The Sound of Istanbul (2005).

Filmography

Director
Crossing the Bridge - The Sound of Istanbul and Screenplay/Producer
Head-On (Gegen die Wand) and Screenplay
Solino
In July (Im Juli)
Short Sharp Shock (Kurz und schmerzlos) and Screenplay

Screenplay

Kebab Connection

Principal Cast
Kismet


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corazón international
Fatih Akin, Klaus Maeck, Andreas Thiel

Ditmar-Koel-Strasse 26 20459 Hamburg/Germany
phone: +49-40-31 25 15
fax: +49-40-31 34 11
Email: amt@corazon-int.de
http://www.corazon-int.de

Fatih Akin on His Turkish-German Love Story "Head-On"

Going to Extremes: Fatih Akin on His Turkish-German Love Story "Head-On"
by Wendy Mitchell


Fatih Akin (right) with "Head-On" stars Birol Unel (left) and Sibel Kekilli (center) at the 2004 Berlin, where the film won the Golden Bear. Photo by Eugene Hernandez.


Fatih Akin's "Head-On" is an energetic blast of extreme situations -- it has laughs and tears, goth songs by The Sisters of Mercy alongside Turkish traditionals, the hip bars of Hamburg and the dusty cafes of Istanbul, and -- of course -- love and hate.

The story follows Cahit (Birol Unel), a miserable, drunken aging punk rocker, and Sibel (former adult film actress Sibel Kekilli), a woman so oppressed by her traditional Turkish parents that she's suicidal. Sibel and Cahit enter into a marriage of convenience, which of course becomes inconvenient when they start to fall for each other. Turkish-German filmmaker Akin says this film is his most personal work to date -- in fact, he got the idea when a Turkish-German wanted to marry him about 10 years ago (he said no, but realized back then it would make a fantastic idea for a film).

That basic plot does no justice to the many complex layers at work in "Head-On," about culture clashes, generational misunderstandings, and the unexpected consequences of love. The film's strengths go beyond impeccable acting and sharp writing -- it also boasts some bold sex scenes and a creative soundtrack.

"Head-On" premiered at the 2004 Berlinale and won that festival's prestigious Golden Bear, followed by other festival prizes and five German Lolas. Even more impressively, it beat out such films as "Bad Education" and "Vera Drake" to win the Best European Film of 2004. indieWIRE contributor Wendy Mitchell spoke to Akin about drama and dark humor, on-camera chemistry, Turkish stereotypes, and his new documentary about music in Istanbul. Strand Releasing releases it on January 21 at the Angelika in New York, dates in other cities will follow.

indieWIRE: This is a serious film, but with a lot of dark humor... Did you spend time trying to lighten it with comedic parts or did you just let it evolve naturally?
Fatih Akin: The situation is just funny. Like when Cahit and the uncle came to her parents to ask for Sibel's hand in marriage, that whole situation is just very absurd. But at the same time it's very real. It's just situational humor. I think stuff like that happens automatically. And when you direct, it you see the humor of it. Because it's such a dark story, you go for the humor. Germans try to categorize films: in a comedy, you just laugh and in a drama, you're not allowed to laugh. I don't believe in that, sometimes we laugh and cry in the same hour. It's dangerous when you have a drama and you put humor in it. I think it's the opposite, the funnier it is in the beginning of such a story, the more dramatic it can become. Because when an audience is laughing, that's opening their souls somehow, and when you have an audience with an open soul, it's much better to hit them with a knife.

iW: So did you actually write this script 10 years ago, or what was the process like?
Akin: The process was growing throughout the years. During that I was working on many different other films -- this is my fourth film in about 8 to 10 years. It was growing with each experience, with each shooting, you get more and more experienced and you use that for your story. Actually, I really started to sit down and write it after 9/11, I started to write it in 2002 and it took me one year of writing it. It has a lot of stuff to do with growing. Even the film is about growing. Not coming of age, but the quest for living, where are we going.

iW: Part of the reason the film works so well, obviously, is the chemistry between Birol and Sibel. What was the casting process -- you knew Birol before, so did you always picture him in this role?
Akin: Yes, he was like a basis for this film. I had the story in my mind in 1995, 10 years ago. Also that was the first time I saw Birol on the screen, at a film festival, in a film made by a director from Luxembourg. I fell in love with him on screen, I thought he was a fantastic actor. And in the credits I saw that he was Turkish like me. So I wanted to meet this guy. I met him and we became friends, and he had a small part in my film "In July." We always spoke about this project. He's like the character in the film -- he's such a punk guy in this surrounding of the Turkish world. It was easy for me to write this stuff. I knew the way Birol speaks, I knew the way he moves, the way he dresses. It was so easy to write and create that for Birol. It was much more difficult for Sibel -- not to write it, I knew exactly where to go with the character. But it was very difficult to find the right actress. I was glad to have Birol as part of the casting process, we could see him with each of the girls we were auditioning to see who worked as a couple.

iW: When you first saw Birol and Sibel together, how did you know that was the your right couple?
Akin: Well, it wasn't that they came together and we all said "bingo." Actually, they don't like each other. During the shoot, they respected each other but I cannot say that they really liked each other. But the casting was very simple, it was something on the surface. The camera loved them both as a couple. Visually, they are very sexy together. I used the fact that they don't like each other because the story is shot like that -- in the beginning, Cahit hates Sibel. So I could use that. We shot chronologically so their relationship developing in the film is what also happened on set -- not that they fell in love, but their respect for each other grew every day.

iW: Did Birol and Sibel bring a lot to the characters? Was there a lot of improvisation?
Akin: They bring a lot. I think there are two types of directors... the first kind doesn't allow anything for improvisation and you follow each comma in the script. I'm not like that, once I start shooting I forget the scriptwriter in me. I like things flowing. If you have talented actors who bring their own ideas, it can be much better than what you have worked out. Before we shot, we had three weeks of rehearsals, and during that process we changed a lot. They brought a lot of ideas to it. Although we had those strict rehearsals and changed the script then, we didn't go crazy on the set. I don't want to come to the set and not know what we're doing. But even occasionally on the set we'd react to things. It was like destiny was directing the film, I just went with the flow.

iW: Music seems so central to this film... I heard you are a DJ, so did you handpick all of this music yourself?
Akin: Yes, I picked most of the music before the film started. It was a good experience. It's like how I collected the script with experiences. Certain things I saw, certain stories people told me, I wrote them down. That all connected with each other. Same thing with the music, I listen to a lot of music... For example, the track playing when Sibel is cooking, I was listening to that for the first time, and I thought, this could be great for a cooking scene, and I wrote that down in my notes. I always listen to music when I write, I need a rhythm to write. When I was writing the bar fight scene, I was by chance listening to that track, "After Laughter Comes Tears" by Wendy Rene. I thought, "This fits perfectly well." So I just noted that while I was writing. When I had all my songs, we realized we wanted to have an extensive budget for the music. I wanted 100,000 euros, not the usual 20,000 euros. On the other hand, I didn't spend much money on costumes (those were the actors' personal clothes), I didn't use much money for lighting, and all the film is shot by hand cameras, so we could put that money to the music. As a director, you can transform your vision more with the music. Film is a two dimensional thing -- it goes up and down and left to right but if you put that music into that two dimensional medium, it became like a third, fourth, and fifth dimension, I really believe in that.

iW: What about the Turkish singer and chorus on the Bosphorus, what inspired that?

(TSN Ed. It is actually Golden Horn/Halic)
Akin: That's like a Brechtian element. As a young scriptwriter I like to try things out, so with this story it was not fitting into a three-act dramaturgy. It's too complicated or too different. I read a lot about theater and I discovered Brecht, and also classical Greek tragedy, and they are built on five structural acts. I wanted to work with that, and to really show the audience when a new act is beginning, One of the basic ideas for the mood of the film was the idea that western punk music is really connected -- in the lyrics for example -- into classical Turkish music. Both are about how you can love somebody so much you go insane, you feel so much passion that you want to hurt yourself. Even with Depeche Mode or Nick Cave or Iggy Pop, I discovered a connection to the eastern world, so I wanted to bring that to the film. Also it was a way to break the Western, realistic look of the film with a kitschy postcard element. But those elements are connected to each other, and that's me.

iW: This film shows this Turkish immigrant experience, but it's so not a stereotyped film, these are such unique individuals. I wondered how Turkish people have reacted to the film?
Akin: When I wrote the film, I kept in my mind that I have three audiences -- obviously there are more, but these are three big ones -- German, Turkish, German-Turkish (people like me). They are all different from each other. The Turkish people were really positive. The biggest compliment I got is that the Turkish film world saw it as part of Turkish cinema.

The German-Turkish audience was very divided. Half of the reactions were very positive. Some people say, "We can identify with that. It's my story." But we had a lot of people who were really angry about it, saying, "Why do you just show the bad attitudes of our society? Or how can you show Turkish women naked in the film?" It was every extreme.

iW: Do you think this is a realistic depiction of the Turkish immigrant experience abroad?
Akin: Like you mentioned, those characters aren't typical. They aren't representative of the general Turkish minority in Germany. But the conflict is representative. This film came after 9/11. The world really changed after that. The Muslim world is considered in a much different way after 9/11. For me actually it is about generation conflict -- my parents have another attitude, another education, another background than I have. And that's the same whether you are Muslim or Catholic, this generational difference. Look at Scorsese's early films, his characters are trying to get out of this Catholic background. Somehow it's a generation thing.

iW: The scene of Sibel getting attacked in the street is so painful to watch, was that difficult to film?
Akin: To be honest it's really not that difficult to film. You have to choreograph it carefully. But I don't like violence in movies, I'm not a kind of Tarantino fan. But sometimes it's necessary. Maybe it's too violent, but I needed this kind of shock for the audience. I wanted everyone to understand that when she was in that scene, it was her way of committing suicide. But to shoot that you need humor... otherwise you'd go crazy. One interesting thing is just after we shot that, the next day Sibel had appendicitis -- her body was getting ill exactly where she was hit with the fake knife. She believed what she was acting so much. It was almost like there was witchcraft on this movie shoot about things coming true after we had shot them. Another thing that happened was the scene about Sibel's parents getting the news about Cahit, people said that's trivial. But then Sibel's real parents found out her adult films from reading the newspapers. And her sister told Sibel that the same thing also happened as in the film, that her father was burning the pictures of Sibel. And the moment where Birol was quitting drinking in the film... when we shot it, he's actually an alcoholic, and he got so ill that he couldn't eat or drink anymore -- he was in therapy. When he came out of that, he weighed 15 kilos less. When he stropped drinking in the film, he really stopped drinking in reality.


iW: So now you have your own production company, and I hear you are working on a documentary now?
Akin: Yes, it's called "Crossing the Bridge," it's about the music scene in Istanbul. When we were shooting the musicians there for "Head-On," it was such an interesting world for me, that I wanted to share it with an audience. So we decided to make this documentary, and it covers all kinds of music -- Kurdish music, hip-hop music, gypsy music, Islamic music. And at the same time it's a portrait of the city and of the country.

iW: Do you enjoy the documentary work instead of a narrative?
Akin: Well, I did a documentary for television several years ago about my family. It won an award but I wasn't satisfied with it. I wanted to do it better. Fiction is my home, I came from fiction, I like to tell stories. But when you see "Head-On," it has this documentary style, so working on documentary can really help me working on fiction. I like the documentary work. Maybe every two films you need to do documentary to tell what you really want to tell and not be limited by the medium. With documentary you don't create the reality you have to hunt the reality.

iW: Do you have any other fiction scripts in the works?
Akin: I have two scripts, one I hope to shoot this year is called "Soul Kitchen," it's about a restaurant in the area of Hamburg where I live. It's a love story, about Greek owner of the restaurant who has a relationship with a basketball player with Serbia. It's a small project to try things out. It's a comedy. I'm a Billy Wilder fan, and comedy is much, much more difficult than drama. You know, it wasn't that difficult to shoot "Head-On." I just went out and did it -- my instinct could lead me. But with a comedy it's more about timing. I would like to try this.

After than, I have another project about the filmmaker Yimaz Guney, in 1982 he made a film called "Yol" (The Road), which shared the Palme d'Or in Cannes. He was a Kurdish filmmaker who was imprisoned in Turkey for 18 years and he made six films out of prison and then ran away from prison and made his last film in France and died in France. He's kind of notorious hero in Turkey. So his widow wants me to make a film about his life, so I'm working on that but it's a very big project. So there's a lot of stuff to do (laughs).

http://www.indiewire.com/people/people_050119akin.html