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ANKARA: Border Town Of Hopa Hosting First Ever Caucasus Film Days

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  • ANKARA: Border Town Of Hopa Hosting First Ever Caucasus Film Days

    BORDER TOWN OF HOPA HOSTING FIRST EVER CAUCASUS FILM DAYS

    Today's Zaman
    July 28 2009
    Turkey

    Despite launching a number of film festivals in the last five years,
    Turkey still does not boast very many cinematic gatherings.

    Moreover, most of the existing film festivals are held in
    metropolises. But later this summer, a new -- albeit tiny -- event
    is to be added to the country's slate of film festivals, placing the
    coastal town of Hopa in Turkey's easternmost Black Sea province of
    Artvin on the map for filmmakers from the Caucasus.

    The first Caucasus Film Days festival is coming to Hopa, near the
    Georgian border, from Aug. 9 to 13, introducing just five feature films
    from Azerbaijan, Georgia, Armenia, Russia and Turkey to moviegoers in
    its first year. The event will also screen six Turkish documentaries
    and will include a workshop on documentary making.

    The Turkish Culture and Tourism Ministry is one of the sponsors of the
    new festival, which is a joint effort by the local BiryaÅ~_am Culture
    and Ecology Association and the Ä°stanbul-based movie production
    company Kuzey Film.

    The Russian entry in the festival is "Alexandra" from master filmmaker
    Alexander Sokurov. The film, which had its world premiere at the 2007
    Cannes Film Festival, presents a different perspective on the tension
    between the Russians and Chechens.

    Georgian director Julie Bertucelli's 2003 film "Depuis qu'Otar est
    parti..." (Since Otar Left), which won the Critics Week Grand Prize
    at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival and the Best First Film Award at
    the Cesar Awards, France's equivalent of the Oscars, is the second
    film in the lineup.

    Azerbaijani director Huseyin Mehdiyev's "Ozge Vaxt" (Strange Times),
    a striking story about a father-daughter relationship, and Armenian
    director Harutian Khachatrian's "Border," which questions the whole
    concept of borders, are the other two films on the slate. Young
    Turkish filmmaker Ozcan Alper's internationally award-winning first
    feature film, "Sonbahar" (Autumn), is the festival's Turkish entrant.

    Alper will also be among the lecturers at the festival's documentary
    workshop, alongside such professionals as film editor Cicek Kahraman,
    film critic Senem Aytac and documentary directors Ethem Ozguven and
    Selcuk Erzurumlu.

    The Caucasus Film Days will not only screen movies, but will also
    feature musical performances. The event will open with a concert by
    jazz pianist AyÅ~_e Tutuncu on Aug. 9 and singer Å~^evval Sam will
    entertain festival goers with her live performance of Anatolian songs
    on the festival's second day.

    The films in the first Caucasus Film Days festival are to be shown
    either outdoors or in the convention hall of the BiryaÅ~_am Association
    as Hopa no longer has a movie theater after the recent closure of the
    Kazım Koyuncu Culture Center. Named after the late singer-songwriter
    Kazım Koyuncu, one of the most prolific and famous artists the town
    has raised, the center used to host all sorts of cultural activities
    such as theater plays, concerts and movie screenings in the town until
    the municipality decided to close it following the local elections
    in March.

    Documentary hub for the region

    Although starting off as an 11-film showcase, the Caucasus Film Days
    is actually aiming to have quite an important role, hoping to become
    a major film festival in its surrounding region, one which showcases
    the capabilities of younger generation film directors in the region.

    Director Alper, a native of Hopa, acted as a consultant for this new
    film festival and notes how important this aim really is, emphasizing
    that there is great demand for this kind of event in the region. "There
    is a huge demand, especially from young people in the city," says
    Alper, adding that the underlying aim of the festival is not only to
    showcase films, but also to create a new cultural center for the city.

    "We want to hold a festival on the level of those held in Yerevan and
    Tbilisi. Perhaps films done by the young people in the workshop this
    year will be shown at next year's festival," says Alper.

    He also notes that further assistance from local and regional
    administrations is a firm expectation of the festival's
    organizers. Alper says that this being the first year of the event,
    word did not spread very far or fast about its launch.

    Among the six documentaries to be featured in the Hopa festival are
    Ruya Arzu Köksal's 2007 documentary "Son Kumsal" (The Last Beach),
    which depicts how the Dutluk beach in the Black Sea town of Vakfıkebir
    was destroyed by the construction of the Black Sea highway, and "4857,"
    co-directors Petra Holzer, Selcuk Erzurumlu and Ethem Ozguven's account
    of the lives of dozens of laborers who work under unsafe conditions at
    shipyards in Ä°stanbul's Tuzla district. The traditional architecture
    of the eastern Black Sea region is examined in Suha Arın's "Sisler
    Kovulunca" (When the Fog is Swept Away), and "Å~^airin Olumu" (Death
    of a Poet) by Elif Ergezen will take a look at the life and times of
    Hopa poet HelimiÅ~_i Xahasın, who spent the last days of his life
    in the former Soviet Union.

    Evening screenings at the festival will take place at an open-air
    theater to be erected on KopmuÅ~_ Beach on the Black Sea coast in
    Hopa. Daytime screenings are to be held indoors at the BiryaÅ~_am
    Culture and Ecology Foundation headquarters.
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