Top

film

Stories

 

From a Divided Country, a Stark and Bleak Cinema Emerges

Poised between East and West, Turkish cinema reflects a divided society—both deeply religious and ferociously secular—where men and women frequently occupy separate spheres, and where the long arm of state control extends from mud-walled villages to Istanbul's crowded streets. Life there may be complicated, but it makes for great material. Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Distant, which won the Grand Jury Prize and awards for its two stars at Cannes this year (and screens as part of the New York Film Festival October 15 and 16), is merely the most prominent among the dozen features screening in this festival, which range from classic melodramas to highly charged works that test the limits of censorship.

Disappearing act: In Nowhereland
photo: New York Turkish Film Festival
Disappearing act: In Nowhereland

Fans of Yesim Ustaoglu's Journey to the Sun(1999)—a Kurdish, neorealist political thriller—should look out for her first feature, The Trace(1994), unavailable for screening at press time. (I'm also curious to see Ravin Asaf's Yellow Days(2002), a fictional account of the 1988 Iraqi Kurdish massacres, recently banned by the Turkish government.) At once subtle and acute, Ceylan's Distantchronicles the relationship that unfolds when an Istanbul photographer in the throes of a midlife crisis plays host to a relative who unexpectedly arrives from the provinces for an indefinite stay. This photographer (Muzaffer Özdemir) is a familiar type in post-Antonioni cinema—divorced, childless, and enveloped in a cloud of anomie, he drifts through a middle-class urban existence without hope or connection. His unemployed country cousin (Mehmet Emin Toprak) is his mirror image, minus the wealth and sophistication—a man unmoored from his life's purpose. Ceylan lets their story unfold with minimal dialogue and in exquisitely composed long shots that speak eloquently of a culture's unraveling.

In Nowhereland(2001), a moving film written and directed by Tayfun Pirselimoglu (who also wrote The Trace), focuses on the country's thousands of missing persons, many presumably political prisoners detained by the government. Zühal Olcay stars as a mother determined to search for her son, who has suddenly disappeared. Her gripping performance charts the gradual transformation of a woman driven mad by the inaction and indifference of the officials (all men) who respond to her inquiries by showing her the door.

 
My Voice Nation Help
0 comments
Sort: Newest | Oldest
 

Now Showing

Find capsule reviews, showtimes & tickets for all films in town.

Powered By VOICE Places

Join My Voice Nation for free stuff, film info & more!


Box Office

  1. Star Trek Into Darkness, 70.2 mil, 83.7 mil
  2. Iron Man 3, 35.8 mil, 337.7 mil
  3. The Great Gatsby, 23.9 mil, 90.7 mil
  4. Pain & Gain, 3.2 mil, 46.7 mil
  5. The Croods, 3.0 mil, 177.0 mil
  6. 42, 2.8 mil, 88.8 mil
  7. Oblivion, 2.3 mil, 85.6 mil
  8. Mud, 2.2 mil, 11.7 mil
  9. Peeples, 2.2 mil, 7.9 mil
  10. The Big Wedding, 1.2 mil, 20.3 mil
Movie Title, Weekly Earnings, Total Earnings

Movie Trailers

©2013 Village Voice, LLC, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places New York

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city