Turkish film Fetih 1453 excites nationalism - Los Angeles Times
news.am
April 29, 2012 | 10:05
Armenian News-NEWS.am presents the concise version of the article
published in the Los Angeles Times.
The Turks have a blockbuster they call `Fetih 1453'. In that year the
Turks took over the Byzantine Capital Constantinople - today's
Istanbul, Los Angeles Times reports.
The film which has 16 thousand extras, sword fighting scenes, tons of
blood and turbans broke all records in Turkey, not only for its cost
($ 17 million), but also at the box office, which is more than twice
the investment.
Turkish columnist Burak Bekdil received life threats after making
statements against the film saying that next the Turks can film a
movie on the Armenian Genocide of 1915 or the capture of Northern
Cyprus in 1974.
`Unfortunately millions of Turks go to the cinemas in order to be
proud of our ancestors and visually show their children `our
greatness',' he wrote.
Even in the pro-government paper Today's Zaman columnist Emine
Yildirim criticized the film for its extreme nationalism.
news.am
April 29, 2012 | 10:05
Armenian News-NEWS.am presents the concise version of the article
published in the Los Angeles Times.
The Turks have a blockbuster they call `Fetih 1453'. In that year the
Turks took over the Byzantine Capital Constantinople - today's
Istanbul, Los Angeles Times reports.
The film which has 16 thousand extras, sword fighting scenes, tons of
blood and turbans broke all records in Turkey, not only for its cost
($ 17 million), but also at the box office, which is more than twice
the investment.
Turkish columnist Burak Bekdil received life threats after making
statements against the film saying that next the Turks can film a
movie on the Armenian Genocide of 1915 or the capture of Northern
Cyprus in 1974.
`Unfortunately millions of Turks go to the cinemas in order to be
proud of our ancestors and visually show their children `our
greatness',' he wrote.
Even in the pro-government paper Today's Zaman columnist Emine
Yildirim criticized the film for its extreme nationalism.