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Ankara: Golden Orange Celebrates Turkish Cinema

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  • Ankara: Golden Orange Celebrates Turkish Cinema

    GOLDEN ORANGE CELEBRATES TURKISH CINEMA
    Emrah Guler

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Oct 9, 2009

    The 46th Golden Orange Film Festival kicks of Saturday with 150
    films meeting cinema enthusiasts in the Mediterranean city of
    Antalya. Sixteen Turkish and 12 international films will compete for
    the golden Venus 46th Antalya International Golden Orange Film Festival

    46th Antalya International Golden Orange Film Festival

    It's that time of year again for competition, controversy and cinema to
    run hand in hand in the streets of the southern city of Antalya. It's
    the Golden Orange Film Festival, the biggest event of cinema in Turkey
    for the last half-a-century.

    The festival has always been a volatile event, especially its national
    competition. The selection of the films, the selection of the jury,
    the handing out of awards, and the aftershock following the ceremonies
    have always made the national competition more than just a competition.

    Thanks to the changing face of the festival over the last couple of
    years, Golden Oranges have become a younger, dynamic and professional
    event, earning a long-postponed respect in international circles. This
    is, of course, fuelled by a proliferation of inspiring Turkish films
    that are leaving their mark on international festivals more and more
    each year. And we shouldn't forget the line of famous names strolling
    through the streets of Antalya during the festival.

    This year brings a whole new dynamic as experienced festival director
    and movie writer Vecdi Sayar heads the festival committee, bringing
    in anticipated recent films by international directors of acclaim,
    increasing the number of films to be screened, as opposed to previous
    year's extravaganza of national and international celebrities,
    stealing the thunder from the cinema.

    Changing face of a festival

    The 46th Golden Orange Film Festival begins Saturday and will feature
    around 150 films in 20 categories over the next week. The festival
    will end with a ceremony announcing the winners of the national com
    documentary, as well as the international competition, a first in the
    festival. The national competition includes 14 categories, with Best
    Debut Feature added as a new category. While the Best Picture will
    win 300,000 Turkish Liras, the Best Debut will receive 50,000 liras.

    Until recently, the Golden Orange was all about the national
    competition, hence all the controversy surrounding the selection of
    the jury panel and the award-winning films. Until a few years back,
    the festival was in the hands of the municipality, but then they
    decided to collaborate with the Turkish Cinema and Audiovisual Culture
    Foundation, or TURSAK. In its history of more than four decades,
    the festival hardly had a year when the independence of selections
    went unquestioned.

    Things have changed, and the meticulous planning and integrity of the
    selection of the judges leave no room for doubt any more. Veteran
    director Erden Kıral will lead this year's jury, and will include
    actors İzzet Gunay and Yavuz Bingöl, last year's Best Actress winner
    Nurgul YeÅ~_ilcay, director Mustafa Altıoklar, art director Mustafa
    Ziya Ulkenciler, movie critic Omur Gedik, screen writer Sırrı
    Sureyya Onder, and writer Zeynep Oral.

    Awaited films from acclaimed directors

    Sixteen films will be competing in this year's national film
    competition, half of them from newcomers. One film in Kurdish (Miraz
    Bezar's "Min Dit") and that will be a first in the history of the
    festival, but in line with the recent government policies of the
    Kurdish initiative. Among this year's competing films are long-awaited
    new films from acclaimed directors: Zeki Demirkubuz's "Kıskanmak"
    (Jealousy), Kutlug Ataman's "Aya Seyahat" (Journey to the Moon),
    Reha Erdem's "Kosmos," and Yavuz Ozkan's "Ä°lkbahar Sonbahar"
    (Spring Autumn).

    Ä°nan Temelkuran will further delve into the world of machismo and
    falling male identities in his second feature "Bornova Bornova,"
    following his impressive debut "Made in Europe." Documentary directi
    Ozgur Dogan return with another unique film in which they blur the
    lines between reality and fiction with "Ä°ki Dil Bir Bavul" (On the
    Way to School), following a Turkish teacher throughout the course of
    one school year as he tries finding ways to communicate with Kurdish
    children in a village.

    The international competition will have 12 films, two of which are
    Turkish: Abdullah Oguz's "Sıcak" (Hot) and Pelin Esmer's "11'e 10
    Kala" (10 to 11). Among other nominees are Bulgarian director Kamen
    Kalev's "Eastern Plays," with Turkish actresses Hatice Aslan and Saadet
    IÅ~_ıl Aksoy in another film blurring the lines between documentary
    and fiction, and "Border" by Armenian director Harutyun Khachatryan.

    This year, the golden Venus holding an orange in one hand, Antalya's
    symbol, will be proud to be part of an international film festival
    where young and fresh cinema from diverse background and cultures will
    be celebrated for a week in the warm atmosphere of the Mediterranean.
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