Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Venetian Odyssey for Turkish cinema

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Venetian Odyssey for Turkish cinema

    Gulf Times, Qatar
    Aug 26 2014

    A Venetian Odyssey for Turkish cinema

    By Gautaman Bhaskaran


    The 71st edition of the world's oldest and highly celebrated Venice
    International Film Festival begins today on the Adriatic-swept and
    lagoon-washed island of Lido, with Alejandro Inarritu's Birdman (also
    known as The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance). Starring Michael Keaton,
    Edward Nortan, Amy Ryan, Emma Stone and Naomi Watts, Birdman is a
    black comedy about a Broadway actor struggling to mount a play. And
    how he does this by subduing his own ego and getting his career and
    family back on track is what Inarritu's work is going to tell us.

    In the days that will follow the opening night, Turkish cinema may
    well hold centre stage. This is not just 100 years of the country's
    movie industry, but also the dawn of a realisation that Turkey is
    capable of creating some great work on screen.

    We saw an example of this last May at Cannes, when Nuri Bilge Ceylan,
    showed his brilliant Winter Sleep. Tracing the life of a former
    theatre actor - who grapples with newspaper columns, the small hotel
    he runs in a remote mountainous region and the moods of his pretty,
    young wife and divorced sister - Winter Sleep clinched Cannes's
    highest trophy, Golden Palm, and later became Turkey's official Oscar
    submission in the foreign language category. Not just this, Ceylan and
    Winter Sleep appear to have nudged the world into wakefulness about
    Turkish cinema.

    Interestingly, this cinema will be quite visible at Venice this year.
    Veteran Fatih Akin will showcase his The Cut, while newcomer Kaan
    Mujdeci will unroll his Sivas.

    Akin caused a furore last April when he withdrew The Cut from the
    Cannes Film Festival lineup citing "personal reasons". The movie
    starring French actor Tahar Rahim, focuses on the touchy issue of the
    1915 genocide of Armenians in Turkey under the Ottomans. The Cut is
    the final part of Akin's trilogy called, Love, Death and the Devil.
    The first two films were Head-On and Edge of Heaven.

    While 20 countries see the 1915 mass killing as genocide and hold
    Ankara responsible for it, the rest of the world ignores this issue,
    preferring to maintain a relationship with Turkey, which has been
    living in denial of the whole thing.

    And obviously The Cut has become a point of friction between Akin --
    who now lives in Germany and whose cinema combines political and
    social criticism with a bit of humour -- and Turkish nationalists. The
    fact that Akin makes great pictures which have won international
    acclaim does not cut ice in Turkey. For some Turks, the genocide is
    absolute taboo.

    The radicals in Turkey have now called for a boycott of The Cut,
    competing for the Golden Lion at Venice. They have also issued death
    threats against Akin, and said he would not be allowed to enter
    Turkey.

    (All this seems like a replay of what is happening in many parts of
    the world. Iran does not tolerate screen dissent. Jafer Panahi is
    under house arrest and banned from making movies for a long time.
    China is as ruthless with helmers who do not toe the official line. In
    India, films run into problems too: even after they are duly censored,
    some political organisation or the other finds something to quarrel
    about and tries its best to stop screenings. There has been a spurt in
    such incidents of late.)

    Akin's original plan was to direct a movie on the late Armenian
    journalist, Hrant Dink, who sought a dialogue between Armenia and
    Turkey. He also wrote a great deal about the genocide. In January
    2007, he was shot dead in broad daylight.

    His murder shocked and angered both liberal-minded Turks and
    Armenians, and they demanded the repeal of an Act under which anyone
    found accusing Turkey of the genocide could be jailed. Even the Nobel
    Laureate, Orhan Pamuk, was tried for talking about the genocide to a
    Swiss newspaper. The charges against him were dropped after a huge
    international outcry.

    Given the dangerous trend, it is not surprising that Akin could not
    find a Turkish actor willing to portray Dink. The director had to give
    up this project, and take on The Cut - where a young man, Nazareth
    Manoogian (Rahim), who survives the genocide realises that his
    daughters may be alive. He search for them takes him to Turkey, Syria,
    Cuba and the US.

    As for Kaan Mujdeci's Sivas, it is non-controversial. Set in the
    Anatolian province of Yozgat, Sivas follows the life of an 11-year-old
    child and his friendship with a fighting dog. The Festival Director,
    Alberto Barbera, told the media recently that Mujdeci "had great
    talent. He is a real cineaste and we want him to be better known as a
    director."



    Frances McDormand

    The Venice International Film Festival will honour American actress
    Frances McDormand with the Persol Tribute to Visionary Talent Award
    2014. The prize will be given away on September 1, and the ceremony
    will be followed by the screening of Olive Kitteridge, helmed by Lisa
    Cholodenko and starring McDormand, Richard Jenkins and Bill Murray.

    McDormand has had four Academy Award nominations - Fargo (1996)
    Mississippi Burning (1988), Almost Famous (2000), and North Country
    (2005). She won the statuette for Fargo - where she excels as a
    pregnant cop who nails a car company salesman for a murder. Indian
    actress Vidya Balan playing a pregnant woman in Kahaani a couple of
    years ago reminded me of McDormand in Fargo. I felt that much of
    Balan's mannerism had been lifted from Fargo.

    McDormand's other movies include Promised Land, Moonrise Kingdom, This
    Must Be The Place, Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted, Burn After
    Reading, Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, Friends With Money, Laurel
    Canyon, Something's Gotta Give, Wonder Boys, City By The Sea,
    Madeline, Primal Fear, Lone Star, Palookaville, Chattahoochee,
    Darkman, Hidden Agenda, Short Cuts, Beyond Rangoon, Paradise Road, The
    Man Who Wasn't There, Raising Arizona, and Blood Simple.



    l Gautaman Bhaskaran has been
    covering the Venice International Film Festival for over a decade and
    is now back on the Lido, and he may be e-mailed at
    [email protected]

    http://www.gulf-times.com/entertainment/240/details/405779/a-venetian-odyssey-for-turkish-cinema-



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X