As they both fall in love, their life would never be the same. The movie also points on the elderly reality -now an impossibility- the torture, made by the cops. (don't forget to take with handkerchief to go to the cinema.). That surreal view shows us the differences in thinking between an adult and a child. His parents take over the responsibility of Deniz who comes into term with his father's loss. It is a perfect visualization of what people do because of their ego and what can actually destroy that ego.


As the snow starts to fall, the hotel turns into a shelter, but also in a place from which they can not escape and which feeds their animosities.

The back story of Sadik's (Fikret Kuskan) personal history does not fully come into light until well into the picture, when we learn that he became and anarchist journalist, much to the dismay of his father, who had designs for his son to take over the family farm upon attaining an agricultural degree. This movie will touch your soul and will not let go! In the turbulent years of the 1970s, as a student, and later as a left-wing journalist, Sadik was involved in politics, and that made his old dad renege entirely. Since then, it has received every national award and has become the third-biggest grossing film of the country's history by mid-March (it could go even higher, considering it's still playing in theaters after several months). Best Turkish Movies; Best Turkish Movies. Sadik marries, but his wife dies at the birth of Deniz, their first child. Very rarely can you find a movie that can make a person shed tears of sorrow one minute, then laugh out loud the next.

Half intentional, one night, he strode into the wall. Also the places the film shot was great. But international viewers can also get a real good taste of it, because main themes (such as family bonds, love of son) in the movie are humane things. It's a small family drama, set largely in western rural turkey in 1987. Surviving the accident, she meets a girl who tried to commit suicide to escape the pressure of traditional, Turkish parents.

Hi everyone and welcome to the forum. subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZeAZ0e3UJw2yfA5KmYJ69A?sub_confirmation=1 The film won an award for its soundtrack at the World Soundtrack Awards, awarded to Evanthia Reboutsika.

It's one of those films which really affect you deep. **Movies are listed in descending order according to the number of votes** Refine See titles to watch instantly, titles you haven't rated, etc. Impact triggers labor before the deadline, so the two women get together at the hospital and they give birth the same day. Sadık's wife gives birth in a park and dies, but their son, Deniz, possibly named after leftist youth icon Deniz Gezmiş, survives. After a long period of trouble and hardship, Sadik returns to his native village, along with little Deniz, though he knows it will be very difficult to relapse with his father. I am always in search of great foreign movies.I had never seen a Turkish movie and then I decided to watch The Bandit(1996) and loved it! His rebellious nature urged him to choose another destiny than he would have had if left at his father’s farm, Hüseyin. If you come across this movie at a local festival or some other way (not very likely, but anyway), give it a shot. I would challenge the viewer to maintain a dry eye as the mystery of father/grandfather Huseyin's (Çetin Tekindor) 'secret room' reveals Sadim's happy and hopeful youth before he left his family. An emotional breakthrough. One comes away from the film with a serene sense of family bond that transcends nationality, as in the end, we are all humans subject to same emotions of love and loyalty.

Film about the town-village conflict, Uzak, has two main characters: Mahmut (Muzaffer Ozdemir), a career-making photographer in Istanbul, and Yusuf (Emin Toprak), his cousin, driven out of his small town by the closure of his factory . Sadık also needs to face his first love, now married with two children, and the question of old friends. The movie is definitely not like a Hollywood production, maybe more like a European film. A perfect portrait of family and problems associated. Kemal is a renowned businessman who lives an enviable life in Istanbul, along with his wife Suzan and sons Mert and Cicek, whom he loves very much. It's worth watching just to see the little kid in the leading role.

Those were the tough days for many. The couple runs outside, but they can't find anyone to take them to the hospital, due to a curfew. During the recent years there have been made some movies that clarifying Turkey's 70s - 80s. Anyone who watches "My father and my son" will eventually relate the movie to a family relationship they have lived.

A young socialist newspaper writer (Fikret Kuskan) loses his wife on birth of his only son on the very first day of the military action, because he can not find any help for delivery of the child. You either like it or you don't.
Unfortunate events make the Turkish people get closer to each other.

The oldest brother (Çetin Tekindor) his natural simplicity which he conducted in his role of a loving older brother whose ill youngest brother was being fed by his own hands while he is waiting for his destiny at the hospital. Everything is perfect, direction, photography, acting, you cannot help but feel for its characters and identify with them, especially if you share the same location in the map, similarities in history and personality traits. My one (small) problem with the film is a few anachronistic details, but i guess they wouldn't even be noticed by someone who wasn't around then and there. The movie makes the viewer ask "what if" questions about almost everything and the answers will be different for everyone. Tue Feb 16, 2010 7:41 am by doktorK: Hi everyone! A canned sardine manifacturer Yusuf puzzles the meaning of his life out after loosing her wife. Personally, the local rural village life took me back to my some good memories. A film about loneliness and alienation, about refusing to approach and personally adjusting to contact with a neighbor, Uzak is one of the most appreciated European films of recent years.

Similarly, the film doesn't give much information about the political events that unfold in the background. A very good choice of cast is the most powerful criterion of the success of the movie.

This was, I think, a great directing success for the new generation director, Çagan Irmak. But, it should be noted that even though the plot may sound political, the film is actually not. This forum is dedicated to Turkey fans and admirers, that includes persons like Turks, their culture and history, and for persons that somehow are connected with Turkey or with the Turks.

Family Secrets[1] (Turkish: Babam ve Ailesi) is a Turkish television series produced by Gold Film and aired by Kanal D from Monday at 20:00, between September 19 and December 12, 2016, in 13 episodes.

The acting is definitely remarkable with less experienced characters (including the little kids) putting on a display to remember when aiding patriots of Turkish movie industry. It is indeed a good movie, but i doubt it'll reach the same kind of wide audiences outside the country. There is his grandmother (Hümeyra Akbay) who drives a tractor and speaks on a short wave radio, his aunt Hanife (Binnur Kaya) who wears bracelets from her wrist all the way to her shoulder, and his uncle (Yetkin Dikinciler) who is a little naive. As I watched that movie, I saw the Turkish relationships in the best way that it could be shown. I went to back again to my childhood when I was watching the movie. My name is Keila.