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Uzak (pronounced, Distant in North America) is a 2002 Turkish drama film written, produced, shot and directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan.. The film won a total of 31 awards at various film festivals, including Best Actor at Cannes, Special Jury Prize at Chicago, and Best Balkan Movie at Sofia International Film Festival. [1]
The oldest film to be dropped was D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation (1915), from #44. The oldest film to be added was Griffith's Intolerance (1916) (#49). The newest film removed is Fargo (1996), the newest added The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), which is also the only film on the list released after 1999.
Week End date for the week Film Tickets sold Gross () Note(s) 1: January 3, 2019: Aquaman: 391,402 ₺6,415,239 [1]2: January 10, 2019: Bizim İçin Şampiyon
Netflix film series Mükemmel Eşleşme 13 Final Nasıl Fenomen Oldum 12 Final Bein connect/Diğitürk series O Kız 24 Final Oğlum 15 Final Pera Palas'ta Gece Yarısı 8 No Netflix web series Sadece Arkadaşız 20 No Exxen web series Senden Daha Güzel 14 Final Seni Dinliyorum 10 No Exxen web series Seni Kalbime Sakladım 7 Final Seversin 20
Breath (Turkish: Nefes: Vatan Sağolsun, literally Breath: Long Live the Homeland) is a 2009 Turkish drama film directed by Levent Semerci.The film, which tells the story of 40 soldiers in charge of protecting a relay station near the Iraqi border in southeastern Turkey, was adapted from the short stories Tales from the Southeast and Ground Minus Zero by Hakan Evrensel and is, according to ...
Turkish Passport is a 2011 Turkish film directed by Burak Arliel that purports to tell the story of rescue of Jews during the Holocaust by Turkish diplomats. It was promoted as "the only Holocaust film with a happy ending".
Life (Turkish: Hayat) is a 2023 Turkish drama film directed by Zeki Demirkubuz. [1] It was selected as the Turkish entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 97th Academy Awards , but was not nominated.
Writing for The Guardian, Peter Bradshaw rated the film three stars out of five, and described it as "strongly and honestly acted", with "a strong hint of soapy melodrama". [2] In a review for The Telegraph , Tim Robey awarded Kuma the same rating and described it as a "vigorous and engrossing debut".