'Ulak" by Çağan Irmak 475 000 YTL
"Beyaz Hüzün-Sarıkamış" by Orhan Oğuz 450 000 YTL
"120" by Metin Bükey 400 000 YTL
"Süt" by Semih Kaplanoğlu 225 bin,
"İlkbahar Sonbahar" by Yavuz Özkan 300 000 YTL
"Zeytin Dalı" by Mustafa Şevki Doğan 350 000 YTL
'Firar" by Ömer Uğur 275 000 YTL
"Cennet" by Biray Dalkıran 225 000 YTL
"Lüküs Hayat" Ezel Akay 300 000 YTL
"Büyük Oyun" by Atıl İnaç 300 000 YTL
Saturday, May 12, 2007
2007 | Financial support list for Turkish Films
Saturday, May 05, 2007
SÖZÜN BİTTİĞİ YER by İsmail Güneş
Directed by İsmail Güneş; Screenplay by:İsmail Güneş, Ömer Faruk Birpınar
Cinematography by: Baybars Tekin, Ahmet Bayar; Edited by: Mevlüt Koçak;Music: Murat Özdemir; Art Direction:Duygu Kabaçam; Produced by: Mehmet Güneş Cast:Mehmet Özgür, Yasemin Balık, Volkan Severcan, Okan Tangücü, Elif Sümbül Sert, Fatih Ayhan, Mehmet Çepiç, Ahmet Yenilmez, Emin Gürsoy, Yaşar Uzel; İstanbul Güneşi, Türkiye (2007)Production; Dist.: Best Line Pictures.Release date: May 4, 2007
Synopsis: Turgut (Mehmet Özgür)is clown living with his son Umut(Okan Tangücü). The return of the mother when Umut was hospitalized with a leukemia diagnosis brings new hopes to Turgut as he must face a new dilemma.
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Turkish Delight |Musetto Interview
TURKISH DELIGHT

April 22, 2007 -- OZGU Namal had a dream. As a teenager in Istanbul, she would stand in front of the mirror after taking a bath, wrap a towel around her head and pretend to be a Hollywood star.
She has yet to realize her fantasy, but at the tender age of 28 she is Turkey's hottest young actress - star of screen, stage, TV and commercials. Not to mention magazine cover girl.
Last weekend she received a new honor, the top-actress prize at the 26th Istanbul International Film Festival. It was for the love story "International," one of three fest movies in which she appeared.
"I am so excited, my knees are trembling," the petite, dark-haired woman exclaimed as she accepted her prize at a ceremony broadcast live on Turkish TV.
Said an Istanbul newspaper, "This [trembling legs] came as quite a dangerous situation, as the actress was wearing very high heels." Luckily, she never lost her balance.
Earlier that week, Namal and I, with a translator or two helping, had a pleasant chat at the festival. Dressed casually in jeans, Namal said she still dreams of going Hollywood.
"I stayed in Los Angeles for three months in 2001, and attended UCLA language school. I stayed with an American family. Los Angeles is a beautiful city, and I have dreams of living there as an actress." She even dreams of winning an Oscar.
Her idols include Nicole Kidman, Meryl Streep, Al Pacino, Sean Penn, Nick Nolte, Mel Brooks, Pedro Almodovar and French director Gaspar Noe. Surprisingly, she's a fan of Noe's brutal 2002 shocker "Irreversible."
She would love to work for Woody Allen, so I asked if he knew of her wish. "He will learn from your story," she replied. "Life is full of surprises."
More than 200 movies unreeled at the Istanbul festival, which ran for 16 days at six theaters on two continents (Europe and Asia).
Two movies that I saw there are worthy of note: Goran Paskaljevic's "The Optimists," a funny and at times sick film from Serbia, and Danish director Peter Schonau Fog's "The Art of Crying," a sensitive study of father-daughter incest.
New Yorker Tom DiCillo's "Delirious," with Steve Buscemi and Michael Pitt, won a special jury prize.
The top honor, the Golden Tulip, was taken by "Reprise," Norwegian helmer Joachim Trier's homage to the French New Wave.
V.A. Musetto is film editor of The Post. Vam@nypost.com
For more on the Turkey Talk series in the NewYork Post:
Part-1 Off to Istanbul
Part-2 Arrived in sunny Istanbul
Part-3 Beating jetlag
Part-4 Defying terrorists
Part-5 Party time in Istanbul
Part-6 Merhaba from Istanbul
Part-7 Ozgu Namal interview
Part-8 Take a lesson from the folks in Istanbul
Part-9 The End
Review |Times and Winds by Reha Erdem
Film still for The Times BFI 50th London Film Festival: Mysteries Of Puberty
Preview: Times and Winds
Times and Winds by Turkish director Reha Erdem is one of the discoveries of the year, an exquisite affirmation of film as art. By Hannah McGill
If the fourth feature from Turkish writer-director Reha Erdem covers some not-unfamiliar territory - rural families misalign, local conflicts flare and die, and children wrestle with the mysteries of puberty while goat bells clamour and seasons slip by - it does so with sufficient grace and forthrightness to render its content breathtakingly fresh. It is not Erdem's project simply to observe sweetly limited lives or to seek nobility in lack of sophistication. His film is a nuanced drama, possessed of both comic and dramatic force, along with ravishing and expressive visuals.
Human life is compartmentalised in Times and Winds: age, gender and social status divide up the local community, just as the five calls to prayer carve up the day. (The film is split by intertitles into five times of day, and its Turkish title Bes vakit translates as 'Five Times'.) The daily challenges faced by the older children of the village express the transition between innocence and responsibility, the tension between attempted self-realisation and externally imposed definitions. The unconditional protection offered to small children is ebbing away, yet restrictive discipline remains in place. The freedom to make one's own decisions is tempered by the eternal requirement to fall in with existing social codes - and to accept the frightening fallibility of adult authority figures.
Omer (Özakan Özen) is experiencing his Oedipal crisis in entertainingly literal terms: he wants to end the authoritarian domestic regime of his father, the local prayer leader, by way of murder. Erdem's film finds some of its most comedic moments in Omer's plotting (entice a scorpion to bite him, knock him off a mountain ledge?), but retains enough edgy ambiguity to suggest that success is never quite out of the question. Yildiz (Elit Iscan), by contrast, is the apple of her father's eye, but a scene in which she quietly weeps after inadvertently witnessing her parents' lovemaking speaks volumes about the terror and fascination that attend the encroachment of sexual awareness. Yakup (Ali Bey Kayali), meanwhile, sees his own innocent crush on the village schoolteacher disturbingly mirrored when he catches his father playing peeping tom.
Small moments, perhaps, but Erdem invests them with dignity, mystery and humour, while the beauty of Florent Herry's cinematography and Arvo Pärt's score emphasise their universality and mythic potency.
2001 | LA MORT EN EXIL by Ayten MUTLU SARAY

LA MORT EN EXIL
directed by Ayten MUTLU SARAY
SWITZERLAND 2001
Credits
Ayten MUTLU SARAY Screenplay
Felix VON MURALT Cinematography
Elvira ISENRING Set Designer
Cemila MUTLU Set Designer
Amina DJAHNINE Music
Daniel GIBEL Film Editor
Ayten MUTLU SARAY Director
Actors: Elidan ARZONI, Zeynep ARISAN, Dieter STOLL
Synopsis:Khalil is a Palestinian who grew up in Algerian exile. One day he has to leave again and arrive in Switzerland where he asks for a refugee status. The steps : illegal entry on territory, asking for the refugee status, the decision of expulsion, death on the airport. The events related in this film are based on a true story.
Contacts :ayten.mutlu@bluewin.ch
School: ECOLE SUPERIEURE DES BEAUX ARTS - 2 rue du Général Dufour - 1204 Genève - Suisse - Tél. : 41 2 231 778 20 - Fax : 41 2 231 046 36
Geboren 1969 in Pülümür (TR). 1993-97 Studium des Journalismus und der Kommunikationswissenschaften an der Universität Fribourg sowie der Ethnologie und der Religionswissenschaften an der Universität Fribourg und an der Freien Universität Berlin. 1994-96 Journalistische Tätigkeit in der Schweiz und in der Türkei. 1997 Kamera- und Drehbuchkurse in Berlin. 1998 Praktika bei der SMUV-Zeitung und bei Radio DRS. Seit 1999 an der ESAV (Ecole Supérieure d'Art Visuel) in Genève.
Filmography: 1997 Xerema Waye – Willkommen Schwester / 1998 Kurdischer Zauberstab / 2000 Alima; Das Leben ist wie ein Ei auf dem Stein (co-director, all documentaries) / 2001 La mort en exil (short film)
Semih Kaplanoglu selected for Atelier de la Cinéfondation, Funding
In 2005, the Festival de Cannes created the Atelier de la Cinéfondation, a programme which aims to help young filmmakers bring their film project to fruition.
For its third edition, the Atelier de la Cinéfondation has selected 15 directorial projects from 15 different countries. The talent of these filmmakers has stood out at international film events, and they will attend the next Festival in order to finalise the financing of their respective films.
In the spirit of the Festival de Cannes, this selection gives priority to the discovery of nascent talents by promoting the future of, notably, Pablo Agüero, Hicham Falh and Chrif Tribak, Ciro Guerra and Michelangelo Frammartino. The Atelier also lends its support to the continuation of the works of such renowned artists as Tsai Ming Liang and Bertrand Bonello.
The Atelier provides "bespoke" support to the filmmakers and their producers in order for them to finalise the financial arrangements for their projects. To this end, meetings with film professionals who are interested in their projects and would like to meet the directors will be arranged between May 18th and 25th.
The Livre des Projets (Project Brochure) as well as forms you may complete to request a face to face interview will be made available online at the beginning of April.
Argentina - Salamandra Pablo Agüero (1st feature)
Austria - Serviam Ruth Mader (2nd feature)
China - Blown by the Typhoon Ying Liang (3rd feature)
Colombia - The Wind Journeys Ciro Guerra (2nd feature)
France - De la guerre Bertrand Bonello (4th feature)
Italy - Le quattro volte Michelangelo Frammartino (2nd feature)
Kazakhstan - Native Dancer Guka Omarova (2nd feature)
Lebanon - I Can't go Home Khalil Joreige & Joana Hadjithomas (3rd feature)
Morocco - Entre Parenthèses Hicham Falah & Chrif Tribak (1st feature)
Portugal - To Die Like a Man João Pedro Rodrigues (3rd feature)
Romania - A Heart-shaped Balloon Cãtãlin Mitulescu (2nd feature)
Sri Lanka - Ahasinwitai (The Fallen) Vimukthi Jayasundara (2nd feature)
Taiwan - Salomé Tsai Ming Liang (9th feature)
Turkey - Milk Semih Kaplanoglu (4th feature)
USA/Korea - Treeless Mountain So Yong Kim (2nd feature)
Contact: latelier@festival-cannes.fr Site: http://www.cinefondation.com/
Press attache: Anne Guimet anne.guimet@festival-cannes.fr
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Turkish Movies Week in Copenhagen
The seven movies to be screened are "Takva" (A Man's Fear of God), "Dondurmam Gaymak" (Ice Cream, I Scream), "Beynelmilel" (International), "Babam ve Oğlum" (My Father and My Son), "Neredesin Firuze" (Where are You, Firuze?) and "Beyza'nın Kadınları" (Shattered Soul) along with one of the following: "Eve Dönüş" (Homecoming), "Anlat İstanbul" (İstanbul Tales) or "Eğreti Gelin" (Borrowed Bride).
Two Turkish movies en route to NY festival
Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff founded the Tribeca Film Festival in 2002 as a response to the attacks on the World Trade Center. The festival aims to promote New York City as a major filmmaking center and allow its filmmakers to reach the broadest possible audience through an annual celebration of film, music and culture.
"Times and Winds" features a village by the sea, with inhabitants living their lives in five time slices divided by the sound of the call to prayer. Three children, Yakup, Ömer and Yıldız, vacillate between feelings of rage and guilt. Their parents, just like all others in the village, perpetuate what they learned from their own parents: They have a hard time showing love, and they consider beating a preferred method of discipline.
In "Takva," the solitary and deeply religious main character, Muharrem, is devoted to the pious observance of his Islamic sect. But his simple and quiet life is thrown into turmoil when he is promoted to assist with the administrative tasks of his mosque. Now he is forced to make contact with new places and people that he is not ready for, and he begins to fear that God has abandoned him.
‘Beynelmilel’ named best film at Ankara Film Fest
The military coup comedy "Beynelmilel" (International), starring Özgü Namal and Cezmi Baskın, has won the best feature-film award at the 18th Ankara International Film Festival, which ended Sunday night with an awards ceremony.
The film, co-directed by Muharrem Gülmez and Sırrı Süreyya Önder, was recognized for "depicting a very important period in Turkey's history from a certain distance, with irony and with a black comedy approach, and for carrying an extremely local topic to international ground," the festival's organizers said in a written statement Saturday.
"Beynelmilel" centers on the tragicomic stories of a group of local musicians in the southeastern province of Adıyaman in the turbulent 1980s. The film also brought one of its co-directors, Önder, the best screenplay award.
The festival, sponsored by Limak Holding and organized by the Ankara-based World Mass Media Research Foundation, screened 276 films in 10 days with a majority of its program consisting of shorts. Winners of the shorts and documentary categories were also announced, with Mehmet Selçuk Bilge's "Mr. Unhappy Meets the Girl," "Mr. Unhappy Sees a Doctor" getting the best fiction; Yasemin Aydın's "Suret" getting the best experimental short film; and Ayçe Kartal's "Beyinsiz" getting the best animated short film prize. The selection committee awarded R. Nazım Ulusoy's short film "Yır-tık" a special prize, the statement said.
Director Yüksel Aksu's debut feature "Dondurmam Gaymak" (Ice Cream, I Scream), which was Turkey's entry at this year's Oscars, won the Mahmut Tali Öngören special prize while the best director award went to Zeki Demirkubuz for his feature-film "Kader" (Destiny). The film brought two more awards to its cast members, with Vildan Atasever winning best actress and Müge Ulusoy winning best supporting actress awards.
The best actor prize went to veteran actor Haluk Bilginer for his role in the movie "Polis" (Police). The best supporting actor award went to another heavyweight, İlyas Salman, for his role in "Sis ve Gece" (Fog and the Night). "Sis ve Gece" also brought the best director of photography award to Gökhan Atılmış. The best soundtrack award went to Rahman Altın for the music he composed for "Cenneti Beklerken" (Waiting for Heaven), directed by Derviş Zaim.
The festival's selection committee, presided over by screenwriter Emine Nevin Cangür, consisted of director Tunç Başaran, academic Nejat Ulusay, film critic and cinema historian Agah Özgüç and actor Cengiz Korucu.
The festival's big winner "Beynelmilel" is set to compete in this year's Moscow International Film Festival on June 21-30. It will also be screened at the 30th Montreal World Film Festival in Canada.
Saturday, April 14, 2007
Awards of The 26th International Istanbul Film Festival
* The GOLDEN TULIP Award to "REPRISE" directed by Joachim Trier (Norway)
* The SPECIAL PRIZE of the Jury to "DELIRIOUS"Tom Dicillo (USA) directed by
NATIONAL COMPETITION
The National Jury of the 26th International Istanbul Film Festival presided over by Ferzan Özpetek (Turkey), and composed of Klaus Eder (Germany), Mehmet Günsür (Turkey), Yıldırım Türker (Turkey) and Işıl Yücesoy (Turkey) has decided to give:
* The BEST TURKISH FILM OF THE YEAR Award to "İKLİMLER / CLIMATES" directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
* The BEST DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR Award to ZEKİ DEMİRKUBUZ for his film "Kader / Destiny"
The Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Turkey gave a monetary prize of 50.000 YTL to each of the above-mentioned winners.
* The BEST ACTRESS Award to ÖZGÜ NAMAL for her performance in "Beynelmilel / International"
* The BEST ACTOR Award has been shared between ERKAN CAN for his performance in "Takva / Takva A Man's Fear of God" and UFUK BAYRAKTAR for his performance in "Kader / Destiny"
The Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Turkey gave a monetary prize of 10.000 YTL to each of the above-mentioned winners.
* The SPECIAL PRIZE OF THE JURY went to "BEYNELMİLEL / INTERNATIONAL" by Sırrı Süreyya Önder & Muharrem Gülmez
FACE AWARD
THE FILM AWARD OF THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE
The FACE Award (Film Award of the Council of Europe) is given to the film that best reflects the Council's values of respect for human rights, individual freedom, political liberty and the rule of law. The award includes a sculpture in bronze and a cash prize of 10.000 Euros. It is awarded as part of the Human Rights in Cinema section of the festival. The Human Rights Jury of the 26th International İstanbul Film Festival is composed of Gabriella Battaini-Dragoni (Italy), Philippe Boillat (Switzerland) and Turgut Tarhanlı (Turkey).
* The Jury decided to give the award to "BAMAKO / THE COURT" by Abderrahmane Sissako (Mali)
FIPRESCI AWARDS
The FIPRESCI Jury of the 26th International Istanbul Film Festival presided over by Miguel Somsen (Portugal), and composed of Cüneyt Cebenoyan (Turkey), Katharina Dockhorn (Germany), Marina Drozdova (Poland), Nathan Lee (USA) and Uygar Şirin (Turkey), gave:
* The FIPRESCI Award in the International Competition to "KUNSTEN AT GRAEDE I KOR / THE ART OF CRYING" by Peter Schønau Fog (Denmark), for telling the story of a family with secrets everybody knows about but nobody speaks about it, balancing comedy and tragedy. You will never feel detached by this intense portrait of a Danish family, seen through the innocent point of view of a child.
* The FIPRESCI Award in the National Competition, in memory of Onat Kutlar, went to "KADER / DESTINY" directed by Zeki Demirkubuz, for being a story that finds a strong cinematic language to explore the nature of existence and irrationality. Taking the form of a downward spiral, the film is both a perverse anti-romance and a study of obsession.
As in the previous years, Efes Pilsen has given a prize of US$ 30.000 to the winner of the Onat Kutlar Prize, Zeki Demirkubuz, to be used for his next film project.
PEOPLE'S CHOICE AWARDS
PEOPLE'S CHOICE AWARDS sponsored by the Radikal Newspaper and determined by the votes of the Festival audience, are given to:
* "NIWEMANG / HALF MOON" by Bahman Ghobadi (Iran) in the International Competition, and "İKLİMLER / CLIMATES" by Nuri Bilge Ceylan in the National Competition.
Festival Review Great 'Climates' at Istanbul fest
Director Demirkubuz fulfills 'Destiny'
By DEREK ELLEY
ISTANBUL -- Two of Turkey's best-known directors came away the big winners at the Intl. Istanbul Film Festival, which wrapped its 26th edition Saturday.
In the National Competition, a jury led by Italian-based Turkish helmer Ferzan Ozpetek awarded Nuri Bilge Ceylan's "Climates" best film, while Zeki Demirkubuz copped best director for "Destiny." Latter film also won the Fipresci award and shared the actor prize
Both pics -- existential dramas centered on male protags' obsessive problems with women -- also shared the top prizes at Turkey's Antalya fest last fall. "Climates" won a Fipresci award at Cannes last year.
Prizes hardly reflected the diversity and depth of current Turkish cinema, which is on its biggest high in decades. Last year, of the 212 pics released in the country, 34 were Turkish and they accounted for a massive 51% of the nation's total box office tally.
The 21 features in the National Competition showed a wide range of subjects (including a revived interest in stories set during the '80s military junta), as well as much-improved technical and commercial smarts. Like Bollywood movies, Turkish pics now profit considerably from overseas distribution to ethnic communities, both in Europe and North America. Increased revenues are now being funneled back into bigger production budgets.
Other local films favored by foreign observers included "International," an ironic comedy set in a small town during the junta, wacky cop drama-cum-genre riff "Police," slick psychothriller "The Little Apocalypse," crowdpleasing village dramedy "Adam & the Devil," and sumptuously lensed drama "Bliss," one of three movies showcasing rising young actress Ozgu Namal.
New IIFF director Azize Tan assembled a strong program heavy on tributes to filmmakers such as Gus Van Sant, and an international competition praised at the closing ceremony by British director Michael Radford, jury prexy.
Radford and the five other jurors, including Demirkubuz, Icelandic director Dagur Kari and German thesp Udo Kier, gave the top Golden Tulip Award to Norwegian dramedy "Reprise," a first feature by Joachim Trier, and special prize of the jury to Tom Di Cillo's Gotham paparazzi comedy "Delirious," with Steve Buscemi.
Aside from Van Sant and Di Cillo, other notables who jetted in included Paul Schrader (for an honorary gong) and South Korean helmer Park Chan-wook.
Fest, which ran March 31-April 15, still labors under poor screening conditions in the city's crowded Beyoglu district but, per Tan, admissions were up more than 10% vs. last year, tallying 170,000 tickets sold.Climates / N.B. Ceylan and Zeynep Özbatur Destiny / Zeki Demirkubuz

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Friday, March 23, 2007
‘Ice Cream, I Scream’ awarded in US festival
“Dondurmam Gaymak,” the comic story of a local ice cream vendor striving to survive against giant ice cream companies in the 1990s in an Aegean village, was Turkey’s entry in this year’s Oscars as a nominee for the best foreign film category, but did not make the shortlist of the final five nominees that run for the coveted award. The film beat such strong contenders as “12:08 East of Bucharest” in the film program of USCAF, which featured 30 feature-length films, 20 shorts and four world premieres. The festival also awards live comedy performances.
Monday, March 19, 2007
Eurimages 2007 |Yesim Ustaoglu
English title : Pandora's Box
French title : La boîte de Pandorre
By Yesim Ustaoglu (Turkey)
Feature Film
Awarded: 200 000 €
Coproducers:
USTAOGLU FILMS (TR)
LES PETITES LUMIERES / SILKROAD PRODUCTION (FR)
Eurimages 2007 | 104th meeting
Eurimages supports 10 European co-productions
Strasbourg, 28.02.2007 - At its 104th meeting held on 25.02.2007 - 27.02.2007 in Strasbourg, the Council of Europe Eurimages Fund Board of Management agreed to support 10 feature films for a total amount of 3 860 000 Euros.
The feature films are :
Clara - Helma Sanders-Brahms (Germany) (Germany, France, Hungary)
Dorothy Mills - Agnès Merlet (France) (France, Ireland)
Il y a longtemps que je t'aime - Philippe Claudel (France) (France, Germany)
Pandoranin Kutusu - Yesim Ustaoglu (Turkey) (Turkey, France)
Ping pong kingen - Jens Jonsson (Sweden) (Sweden, Denmark)
Sangue pazzo - Marco Tullio Giordana (Italy) (Italy, France)
Skrapp ut - Solveig Anspach (Iceland) (Iceland, France)
The Times that remains - Elia Suleiman (The Netherlands) (France, Belgium, Italy)
Das Vaterspiel - Michael Glawogger (Austria) (Germany, Austria)
Zena bez tijela - Vinko Bresan (Croatia) (Croatia, Serbia)
Support to Turkish Distribution Companies
The Days of Abondonment - Roberto Faenza (Italy)
Distributed by BELGE FILM SAN. VE TIC (Turkey)
Das Leben der Anderen - Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck (Germany)
Distributed by CHANTIER FILMS (Turkey)
Paris, je t'aime - Olivier Assayas (France) – Fréderic Auburtin (France)
Distributed by UMUT SANAT (Turkey)
EURIMAGES is a support fund for co-production, distribution and exhibition of European cinematographic works, established by the Council of Europe in 1988 1
(E-mail: Eurimages@coe.int – Web: http://www.coe.int/Eurimages).
Since its establishment, EURIMAGES has supported 1129 European co-productions for a total amount of more than 330 million Euros.
Council of Europe Press Division
Tel: +33 (0)3 88 41 25 60
Fax:+33 (0)3 88 41 39 11
pressunit@coe.int
www.coe.int/press
1 Since 1 January 2005, EURIMAGES comprises 32 member States: Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, “The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” and Turkey.
Eurimages 2001-2006
Fund contribution from Turkey to Eurimages'5 000 475 Funds provided to Turkish films from Eurimages 6 421 000 Euro
karşın fondan toplam 8 milyon 421 for 35 feature films, 92 cinemas and distribution support to 143 European films
Saturday, March 03, 2007
Halit Refig: Düsmanlarım Sağ Olsun!..
Adı yorgun, kendi dinç savaşçı
Yeşilçam'da dışlandı, devlet eliyle filmi yakıldı; ama Halit Refiğ
bunları yılgınlık değil azim vesilesi yaparak bugünlere geldi. Usta
yönetmen, adına düzenlenen saygı gününde bir araya gelenleri görünce
bu sevgi hâlesinden korktu; çünkü 'böylesine alışık değil'di...
'Gavur icadı' sinema, allem edip kallem edip cennet vatana da
girdikten sonra herkesin kafasının karışması da mutlaktı. Türk
sinemasının seyri de bunu gösterir zaten: Ne yapılacağı
bilinmediğinden, önce ağabey sanat olan tiyatrodan faydalanılmış,
sonra biraz merak edenlerce Avrupa'dan nasiplenilmiş , bu arada
parayı götürmek isteyenler Hollywood'dan kaptıkları küçük formülleri
tatbik etmişler, iyi niyetliler arada kaynayıp gitmiş ve nihayet
70'lerdeki seks furyasıyla Türk sinemasının helvası yenmiş... Bundan
kısa bir süre önce, Atıf Yılmaz'a asistanlık yaparak sinemaya giren
ve yönetmenlik yapmaya başlayan bir isimse sadece film çekmekle
kalmamış aynı zamanda Türk sineması için bir zihinsel iklim haritası
çizmeye çabalamıştı. Fikir babaları arasında yazar, mütefekkir Kemal
Tahir, bestekâr Adnan Saygun ve mimar Sedat Hakkı Eldem'i saydığı bu
haritaya "Ulusal Sinema" adını veren, 1971'de "Ulusal Sinema
Kavgası" adlı kitabında da temellerini, prensiplerini anlatan ve
hayatını da bu mücadele içinde geçiren isim; yönetmen Halit Refiğ.
2004'te Sinema Yazarları Derneği ödül töreninde Onur Ödülü'nü,
dönemin Kültür ve Turizm Bakanı Erkan Mumcu'dan alması, kaderin bir
cilvesiydi. Zira Kemal Tahir'in romanından TRT için
uyarladığı "Yorgun Savaşçı", devlet eliyle yakılmıştı, şimdiyse
devletin bakanı 'onur'landırıyordu yönetmeni. Bakan ayrıca bunun
devletin bir hatası olduğunu da kabul ediyordu. Bu tablo, devletin,
sanatçısıyla barışmasıydı. Önceki akşam Levent Kültür Merkezi'ndeki
resim ise daha geniş bir alanı kapsıyordu ve adeta sinemanın her bir
parçasından Refiğ'e saygı ve sevgi ifadesi yükseliyordu. Beşiktaş
Kültür ve Sanat Platformu'nun düzenlediği 'Saygı Günü'nde, yıllar
boyu sektörün ve devletin yaşattığı yalnızlığını unuttu Refiğ. Bir
film yıldızı yaptığı Cüneyt Arkın da oradaydı; genç bir kızken
keşfettiği Selda Alkor da. Ona en güzel görüntüleri sağlamaya
çalışan usta görüntü yönetmeni Çetin Tunca da anlattı Refiğ'i,
sinemasının izlerini akademik açıdan süren Fatih Özgüven de. Eşi
Gülper Refiğ, "Aşk-ı Memnu"nun müziklerini çaldığı piyanosuyla eşlik
etti söylenenlere. Tunca, bir itirafla başladı konuşmasına: "Biz
görüntüyü süsleyip kendimizi göstermek isteriz. Ama Halit Bey'in
filmlerinde hep bir öz vardır ve bu sebepten filmleri çok sadedir.
Görüntüyü süslemeye falan gerek kalmaz." Bu 'öz'ün terkibini ise
Özgüven verdi: "Sinemayı müziğin, edebiyatın, tiyatronun devamı gibi
görmek eğilimindeyim. Halit Refiğ sineması, kusursuz bir sanat
geleneğinin devamıdır. Refiğ'in, büyük bir geleneği hazmetmiş
olduğu, bütün filmlerinde görülür."
Alıştığımızın aksine bugün ya da bu yıl Halit Refiğ ile ilgili
hiçbir şeyin yıldönümü değil. Ama bir ustaya saygı göstermek için
sonu sıfırlı zamanları beklemek gibi bir şart da olmamalı aslında.
Ancak hoş bir tevafuk, Refiğ için yapılan başka işler de var bu yıl
içinde. Elips Kitap'ın hazırladığı "Bir Halit Refiğ Filmi" bunlardan
biri. Gülşah Nezaket Maraşlı'nın editörlüğünde hazırlanan albüm
kitabın sayfalarını çevirirken 8 yaşında, çalışıp para kazanmak için
evden kaçan Halit Refiğ'i de, dünyanın önde gelen sinemacılarıyla ve
en has dairedeki dostlarıyla bir arada gülümseyen Halit Refiğ'i de
görebilirsiniz. Yapı Endüstri Merkezi (YEM)-Sanal Mimarlık Müzesi
ise "Halit Refiğ Filmlerinde Aşk ve Ölüm Mekânları" adlı bir sergi
düzenliyor. Buna, mart ayı boyunca YEM'de 'Teyzem', 'Hanım'
ve 'Gelinlik Kız' üzerine gerçekleştirilecek söyleşiler eşlik
edecek. Şengün Kılıç'ın, yaklaşık 8 ay boyunca Refiğ'le yaptığı
sohbetlerden oluşacak nehir söyleşi kitabı ise yakında yayımlanacak.
Halit Refiğ: Düşmanlarım sağ olsun!..
"Hayatımı mücadele üzerine kurdum ve hep söylemişimdir; ben sinemada
bir şey yapabildiysem bu, çok büyük ölçüde düşmanlarım sayesinde
olmuştur. Benim için 'Yeşilçam'ın satılmış kapı köpeği' denmesinden,
böyle bir güne gelmek son derecede anlamlı. Ben, bana ne kadar
keskin eleştiri olduysa, mesleğimde ne kadar sert darbelerle
karşılaştıysam, ondan sonraki işimi daha başarılı yapma gayretinde
oldum. Ama bugünden sonra bir şey yapmam artık çok kolay olmayacak!
Bütün vidalar gevşemiş durumda! O yüzden korkuyorum bundan sonrası
için!"
Elif Tunca
Article | Oh the horror!’-- Turkish horror flicks
| ‘Oh the horror!’-- Turkish horror flicks come out of the coffin | |||
| For the past few years, Turkish cinema has been enthusiastically screening horror movies. If you haven't noticed that, you must not have gone to the cinema for at least three days, nor have read anything about movies. | |||
The Taylan brothers started everything with the movie "Okul" (School) in 2004. With the support of Plato Films behind them, at a time when indigenous cinema flirted nicely with the viewer, these two brothers finally released the Turkish genre of horror from its coffin. Despite striking examples in the 1950s and 1970s such as "Drakula İstanbul'da" [Dracula in İstanbul] or "Şeytan" [the Devil], horror really first reached Turkish cinema-goers with "Okul." However, the Taylan brothers probably didn't know that the fuse they ignited would advance so quickly toward an explosion.
*** BÜYÜ (2004) *** DABBE (2005) *** ARAF (2006) *** GEN (2006) *** KÜÇÜK KIYAMET (2006) | |||
| 03.03.2007 | |||
| BURÇİN S. YALÇIN İSTANBUL | |||
Berlinale 2007 | Award for Annem Sinema Ogreniyor
„for its brilliant cinematographic simplicity“.
DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service), which includes three months of study in Berlin within the framework of the Artists-in-Berlin programme as well as financial support over this period of time.
The International Short Film Jury at the Berlinale 2007 was comprised of three personalities whose work is linked to the short film genre.
Peace Anyiam-Fiberesima (Nigeria, Riina Sildos (Estonia),Ning Ying (China)
Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Nesim Hason and New Films International
New Films InternationalNesim Hason, President nesim@newfilmsint.com
8484 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 510 Beverly Hills, CA 90211 T: (323) 655-1050
http://www.newfilmsint.com
Ron Gell, EVP ron@newfilmsint.com
Sezin Sonar, VP sezin@newfilmsint.com
Mark Clark, Production mark@newfilmsint.com
New Films International was formed in 1996 by a highly successful foreign markets distributor Nesim Hason, President and founder. Intent on bridging the distance between the United States and the rest of the world, Nesim Hason with New Films endeavors to consistently blend both foreign and American cultures by introducing American films to the foreign marketplace. With NFI’s own productions, Hason strives to introduce foreign talent to American audiences as well as introduce American actors to working abroad.
New Films is currently headquartered in Beverly Hills and also has distribution offices throughout Eastern Europe.
NFI acquires 8 - 10 titles per year through attendance at major domestic and international festivals and markets. Since 2002, the company has acquired 29 feature films for its international library, including “Game 6”, starring Michael Keaton and Robert Downey Jr.; “The Thing About My Folks”, starring Peter Falk and Paul Reiser; and “Missing In America”. With Academy Award-nominated David Strathairn, Danny Glover and Ron Perlman.
Following the similar successful plan Hason implemented in foreign markets in the mid-90’s, New Films has strengthen its strategic distribution partnerships by recently signing an All TV rights output deal with MGM for Latin America and 40-title Pay TV deal for Latin America, along with a US video deal with HBO. The company plans to continue to leverage these strong relationships to further their exposure and outlets in North America as well.
NFI’s 2-picture co-production deal with Holedigger Studios has added the highly acclaimed festival favorites ”Off The Map”, starring Joan Allen and Sam Elliott; and “Marie & Bruce” starring Julianne Moore and Matthew Broderick. Adding to these great films is “The Dying Gaul” starring Peter Sarsgaard, Patricia Clarkson and Campbell Scott; which NFI aquired through a distribution deal from Holedigger.
EXCERPT
"New Films first entered Eastern Europe in 1993 and now offers 50,000 hours of TV programs in Romania, Bulgaria, Slovakia and other nations commonly bypassed by companies on the path to global expansion. Last month Hason opened an office in Kazakhstan. That country’s gross domestic product (GDP) is dropping at an average annual rate of 7.9 percent, but New Films expects to show a profit this year. Hason also envisions offices in India and China, which he describes as "big, undeveloped markets, where it is very hard to do business but where there are fewer restrictions [on content and program timing] and more products can be sold."
Romania, Hason says, is the most difficult business environment he has experienced, primarily because of the high levels of political instability and runaway inflation. "It makes me nervous," he admits, "but then I grew up in Turkey, so I may be more risk tolerant than most." Hason advises executives at U.S. companies considering expansion into less-developed markets to partner with other U.S. businesses in the emerging country and to start with a small project. "We go in with one manageable project and offer partnerships or sole-supplier agreements to local television stations. We have a price advantage because there are fewer competitors and fewer restrictions on what we can sell. We’ve never lost money on a deal."
Originally printed in the April 2000 issue of Business Finance
Living & Dying

Living & Dying is a 2006 film starring Edward Furlong and Michael Madsen. The film was shot on location in Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas. A release date is anticipated for later in the year.
Plot summary
Living & Dying tells the story of two killers who turn the tables on a group of bank robbers after a botched heist. Under siege from the police and with hostages lives at risk, the robbers must play a deadly game of cat-and-mouse before the killers execute the hostages.
US tagline: 4 Robbers, 2 Killers, a Cellphone, and Way Too Many Guns.
Cast
* Edward Furlong .... Sam
* Michael Madsen .... Lind
* Arnold Vosloo .... Detective Rick Devlin
* Bai Ling .... Nadia
* Jordana Spiro .... Mary Jane
* Tamer Karadağlı .... Duca
* Brandy Little .... Alice
* Yelda Reynaud .... Detective Catherine Pulliam
* Deniz Akkaya .... Anne Noble
* Trent Haaga .... Max
* Maurice Ripke .... Bud
* John F. Beach .... Hodges
* Curtis Wayne .... Karl
* Libby Villari .... Miriam
* Hayden Tweedie .... Jenny
* Monica Dean .... Det. Lascar
* Matthew Tompkins .... Sgt.McCrea
* Brady Coleman .... Harold
* Matthew Posey .... Captain Burleson
* Ken Thomas .... Officer Bishop
* Tom Zembrod .... Bill
* Robin McGee .... Mr.Gris
* Malgorzata Kozuchowska .... Paulina
* Jason Hammond .... Fred
* Marvin Frank Stone III .... Uniformed command center cop
* Brandon Baker .... 21 Jump Baker
* Glenn Bradley .... Officer Walker
* Mark Andrew Clark .... Miami "Serpico" Clark
* Nicole Holt .... Onlooker
* Todd Jenkins .... Police Officer Smith
* Natalie Jones .... Bank Teller
* Steve Krieger .... Sharpshooter
* Yvonna Lynn .... Officer Hardin
* Michael Magnus .... News Camera Man
* Robert N. McLain .... Officer Dalton
* Reece Rios .... Postman
* Martha Twombly .... Officer Bonny
Produced by
* Brandon Baker .... producer
* Laszlo Bene .... line producer
* Mark Andrew Clark .... associate producer
* Elif Dağdeviren .... executive producer
* Ron Gell .... producer
* Nesim Hason .... producer
* Sezin Hason .... executive producer
* Bülent Helvacı .... executive producer
* Jon Keeyes .... producer
Pinar Toprak | Composer
Pinar Toprak
Pinar Toprak is a Turkish composer, best known for composing the film score for Behind Enemy Lines 2: Axis of Evil and the Xbox 360 video game Ninety-Nine Nights. Toprak completed her Bachelor's degree in Film Scoring at the Berklee College of Music in two years and received a Master of Music degree in composition from the California State University at the age of 22. She currently resides in Los Angeles, California.


"Why didn't Turks already have an established tradition of horror movies?" This question has been asked over the last few years. The first answer may be that we haven't had an established genre of horror literature up until now. From this perspective, it's difficult to say how much "Hayalet Kitabı" [the Ghost Book] by Doğa Yücel belongs to horror literature or how similar the Taylan brothers' movie is to a pure horror movie. Their film was about the adventures of a group of young students locked up in a school, we cannot say it is pure comedy, with scenes like where one of the students sees an ugly image of himself in the mirror, or another scene where a spider-like creature crawls on his face. Despite its relative lack of success, "Okul" still impresses by being the first in its field.
Expectations should have been kept very low for Orhan Oğuz, a director who makes a point out of saying "I don't watch horror movies" in his statements to the press, however, he must have thought that he could tackle the difficult task of shooting a horror movie. Unfortunately, all one cay say after watching the movie is that he failed miserably. While you are preoccupied with how a horror movie can possibly be shot without having any exposure to the genre, we'll also take a look at the state that actors such as İpek Tuzcuoğlu, Ece Uslu, Özgü Namal, Nihat İleri and Okan Yalabık were in when attending the movie's premiere.
Similar to "Büyü," "Dabbe" used the Holy Quran as a reference also combining elements of horror films of the Fareast. Director Hasan Karacadağ, who we have apparently imported from Japan, created a low-budget flick whose main problem was that the cast were acting as if their audience and co-stars were Japanese. And much to our surprise, when we discovered that the movie had been influenced by a Japanese production "Kairo," the whole thing left a bad taste in our mouths.
Biray Dalkıran, another first time director, comes from a background in the commercial industry. His movie "Araf" was unanimously cited as the worst movie of 2006 by critics. (Maybe first time directors taking on a genre that is as difficult as horror is the reason for all these unfortunate movies). "Araf" tells the story of a young woman who is forced to have an abortion after she finds out she is pregnant as a result of an illicit relationship. The component of horror in the movie begins when the aborted fetus comes back to find its mother.
Twenty one-year-old Togan Gökbakar's Hollywood-inspired movie "Gene," (Gen) borrowed a little from Kubrick's "The Shining" in terms of its exploitative storyline, which can be applied well as we see in movies like "Identity" (Kimlik). In the storyline, two homicide detectives and a new resident doctor are stranded in a mental institution and try to find their way out of this mystery. "Gen" resembled a bad episode of the "X-Files," and although when compared to its former two counterparts had a "Citizen Kane" feel to it; with its bad acting and unconvincing story line, fell short of expectations.
The Taylan siblings, leaving their first movie attempt "Okul" (School) and the accompanying teenage spirit behind them, presentedus with "Küçük Kıyamet." (Minor Judge-ment Day) The movie that premiered at the end of 2006 deals with a family that lives in Turkey's south who suffers from multiple earthquakes and decides to move to a desolate town's even more desolate home.