Lost: Final sezonuna doğru çoğalan ipuçları

Hiç gelmeyecek gibi gözüküyordu ama Lost’un final sezonunun başlamasına 5 hafta kaldı. Çekimlerin başladığı yaz aylarından beri internette gezinen, ‘hangi oyuncu sette ne yaparken gözüküyordu’ dedikodularını bir yana bırakırsanız, yapımcılar henüz hiç bir görüntüsüne vakıf olamadığımız 6. sezonun ipuçlarını ortalığa saçmaya başladılar bile.

Lost’un yaratıcıları Damon Lindelof ve Carlton Cuse’un da işbirliğiyle geçtiğimiz yaz başlayan Lost Underground Sanat Projesi, bir taşla birkaç kuş vurarak hem fanatik hayranlarının hazine avcısı kimliklerini tatmin ediyor, hem Amerika’nın tanınmış sanatçılarına Lost posterleri hazırlama fırsatı veriyor. Daha da önemlisi, bu posterlerle Lost hayranlarına 6. sezona yönelik ipuçları dağıtıyor. Posterler için DamonCarltonAndAPolarBear.com adresine bakabilirsiniz. Özellikle son posterde 2 önemli ipucu olduğunu biliyoruz.

Lost’un 5. sezon DVD’sini Amerika’dan ısmarlayanları da başka sürprizler bekliyor. DHARMA Girişimi Kiti’yle gelen DVD setinin içinde 1973 yılında DHARMA ve adada yaşayan diğerleri arasında, Richard Alpert’in el yazısıyla kağıda dökülmüş bir barış anlaşması bulunuyor. Bu anlaşmadaki, DHARMA’nın kesinlikle yapmaması gereken 4 kural dikkat çekici: DHARMA ahalisinin adadaki kalıntılara yaklaşmaması, 10 metreden fazla derinliğe kazı yapmamaları, adada kimsenin 15 yıldan fazla kalmaması ve en fazla 216 (108 çarpı 2 oluyor) kişinin adada bulunabileceği yazıyor.

Yeni sezona yönelik ilk tanıtım videosunu da internette bulabilirsiniz. İspanyol kanalı Cuatro’nun hazırladığı videoda ana karakterler dev bir satranç tahtasının üzerinde kurgulanmış ve Radiohead’in Everything In Its Right Place şarkısı eşliğinde İspanyolca konuşan bir ses sonun yaklaştığını söylüyor. Amerika’da 2 Şubat’ta başlayacak sonun başlangıcına geri sayıma başlayabilirsiniz.


Vavien: A masterpiece in black comedy

In their third feature, directing duo Yağmur and Durul Taylan prove their authentic style in black comedy. Written by leading actor Engin Günaydın, ‘Vavien’ will move you with its subtle humor, beautiful dialogue and top-notch acting


The Taylan brothers, a directing duo that serves as Turkey’s answer to the Coen brothers, have been inching toward their masterpiece for the past five years. We have to wait and see if they will be able to surpass their recent gem, Vavien.

With Okul (School) in 2004 and Küçük Kıyamet (Little Apocalypse) in 2006, audiences saw the brothers’ natural talent for mind-play, even if it was not so subtle. In Vavien, they move confidently toward black comedy in a refined way.

Vavien is the story of a middle-class family in a small town in the Black Sea region. On the surface, it’s your typical Turkish family. The breadwinner, Celal (Engin Günaydın), goes about his business, trying desperately to find the next customer as the local electrician. Sevilay (Binnur Kaya) is the dutiful wife, clueless about the ups and downs of their marriage and life in general. Then there’s the neglected teenage son whose only concern is the teenage daughter next door, and the occasional masturbation.

Some innocent and not-so-innocent family secrets are revealed slowly in the first half. In a secret stash, Sevilay collects the euros sent from her father in Germany. Celal is well aware of the money and secretly uses it to spend in the sleazy night clubs in the neighboring city of Samsun. Celal hides his vast collection of porn, unaware that his son has been educating himself with his father’s movies. Around the same time Celal discovers his son’s knowledge of his collection in a not-so-pleasant way, he decides to get rid of his wife for good.

Celal’s plan seems simple yet effective. He takes his family, his brother and some family friends on a picnic on the outskirts of the neighboring mountains. On their way back, he makes sure that the back door of the car is automatically opened so that Sevilay will fall off a cliff. Sevilay disappears during a stormy night, and Celal takes the money from his wife’s secret hiding place. The second half of the movie unfolds in an unexpected series of events.


From the European side to Anatolia

The Turkish audience will recognize Engin Günaydın and Binnur Kaya from the popular TV series Avrupa Yakası (The European Side) in roles that are totally opposite from the ones that are usually associated with them. The script was written by Günaydın himself, and his interest in casting himself and Kaya in the leading roles raised a few eyebrows. Vavien, however, shows that Günaydın’s instincts were very right in showing the audience both actors’ ranges.

The script seems to be the perfect vehicle for directors Yağmur and Durul Taylan to showcase their craft for building suspense that they hinted at in their previous films. Vavien doesn’t include any immediate surprises or big confrontations. Instead, it builds a strong story without any sense of urgency, only to break everything down slowly and gracefully. The film brings to mind the films of the other directing duo, the Coens, especially Fargo.

The two supporting characters – Settar Tanrıöğen as Celal’s brother and Serra Yılmaz, a regular of Ferzan Özpetek movies, as the female parliamentarian – do wonders in altering the pace of the movie and move the story beautifully whenever they enter the scene. We learn that “vavien” is an electrician’s term to explain the layout for switching on the same light from different locations. Pay attention to the scene when Celal explains what “vavien” is to his wife and the parliamentarian. At first glance unimportant, the scene becomes a turning point for the series of events that will unfold. The scene is a lesson in writing and directing.

Black comedy was never a strong suit for Turkish cinema. Vavien and the Taylan Brothers are about to change that.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 26 Dec. 09


Zombieland: The dead finally return

Newcomer Ruben Flesicher’s inspiring road movie puts four odd characters into an SUV in a zombie-filled world. Amid the blood, gore and flesh-eating zombies, ‘Zombieland’ somehow manages to warm the heart.


With vampires and werewolves running rampant onscreen, it was time for a good old-fashioned zombie movie. Of course, Zombieland is not your average zombie movie, with the director (Ruben Fleischer) and two writers (Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick) being hip MTV alums.

Zombieland begins with a narration by an introverted nerd who tells the story of how the world came to an end when an unknown virus turned everyone into zombies, except the four main characters and the celebrity cameo.

The characters are known either by where they are from or where they are headed. Columbus (Jesse Eisenberg from The Squid and the Whale) tells the audience his rules of survival in the United States of Zombieland, where being a recluse and outcast has helped him survive. He meets Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson, reprising a more relaxed version of his role in Natural Born Killers) and the sisters Wichita (Emma Stone from Superbad) and Little Rock (Abigail Breslin from Little Miss Sunshine).

The mismatched quartet hits the road to reach an amusement park in Los Angeles. In Columbus’ words, everyone is an “orphan in Zombieland,” and the four turn into a dysfunctional family of their own as they head toward Hollywood. Trying to spot celebrity mansions, they befriend Bill Murray, in one of the funniest cameos in movie history. Set in a world filled with zombies, this bizarre road movie surprisingly warms the heart.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 25 Dec. 09

The week in movies - 25 December 09

In a bizarre week at the movies, zombies, chipmunks, jinns and weird couples’ counselors all hit the silver screen. Alvin and the Chipmunks reprise their roles in their second animated feature, in which they meet their female counterparts. Vince Vaughan and Jon Favreau reunite after a decade in the relationship comedy Couples Retreat. And Turkish horror director Hasan Karacadağ recreates the approaching apocalypse once again in D@bbe 2.


Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel

The singing trio of chipmunks Alvin, Simon and Theodore celebrate their 50th year in showbiz in this sequel to 2007’s CGI feature animation. In the new movie, the boys are forced to go back to school, and this time they are not under the care of their human father, Dave Seville, but Dave’s slacker nephew Toby (Zachary Levi from the TV show Chuck). The trio must perform to win the $25,000 school prize, only to find harsh competition in the form of an all-girl band, the Chipettes, a charming blend of Destiny’s Child and the Supremes. The Chipmunks find their love interests in the Chipettes, Brittany, Eleanor and Jeanette (voiced by Anna Faris, Christina Applegate and Amy Poehler). Justin Long, Matthew Gray Gubler and Jesse McCartney all reprise their roles.

Who should watch it? Those looking for a holiday movie they can bring their small children to.

Who should avoid it? Those with high expectations for animated features and the latest CGI movies, which usually have 3-D visuals and plenty of adult undertones.


Couples Retreat

Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau more-or-less reprise their roles in Swingers more than a decade later in this film, in which four couples go to an exotic locale that turns out to be a New Age couples retreat with obligatory counseling. Along with Vaughn and Favreau, Jason Bateman, Faizon Love, Kristen Bell (Veronica Mars), Kristin Davis, Malin Akerman and Kali Hawk star as the couples in retreat, while Jean Reno plays the world-famous “couples whisperer” Marcel. Mediocre directing overshadows the occasionally funny dialogue and impressive cast.

Who should watch it? Those who enjoyed Vaughn and Favreau’s Swingers.

Who should avoid it? Those expecting a smart and funny dissection of relationships by this promising all-star cast.


D@bbe 2

Turkish Director Hasan Karacadağ impressed horror aficionados with his crafty special effects and makeup, and clever use of Islamic themes, in his previous features, D@bbe (2006) and Semum (2008). In the sequel to D@bbe, Karacadağ again makes use of Islamic motifs to announce impending doom; jinns continue to use the Internet to communicate, and wait for signs of the apocalypse. Not necessarily a put-off, the previous two movies were rip-offs of the American films Pulse and The Exorcist, respectively.

Who should watch it? Those impressed with director Karacadağ’s previous horror flicks, especially D@bbe.

Who should avoid it? Those who have lost hope in Turkish cinema’s efforts to recreate the horror genre.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 25 Dec. 09

Amerikan televizyonunda Medeniyetler Çatışması

Medeniyetler Çatışması, Amerikan dizilerinin ana karakterlerini giderek daha renkli karakterlere dönüştürüyor. Bu sene televizyonda Müslüman eşcinseller, şişman zenciler ve kekeme Uzak Doğulular’ı izlemeye hazır olun.


Tombul bir zenci, kekeme bir Uzak Doğulu, tekerlekli sandalyede bir çocuk, süslü bir eşcinsel bir araya geldiklerinde ne olur? Şu anda Amerika’nın en popüler dizisi Glee’nin ana karakterlerini oluşturur ya da Kristin Chenoweth’in dediği gibi “dünyanın en kötü Benetton reklamı” olur.

11 Eylül sonrası tedirginlik-paranoya karışımıyla şekillenen Amerikan kültürünün, farklı etnik, cinsel kimlikleri bağrına basma misyonunu en sıkı dizilerden takip edebiliyoruz. Popüler Amerikan dizileri, bir süredir güzel, beyaz heteroseksüellerin baskınlığından kurtulmuş durumda.

Son birkaç yıldır hayatımıza giren dizilerin ana karakterlerine baktığımızda, önceleri iğreti bir şekilde, ‘hadi biraz bundan da ekleyelim’ şeklinde başlayan bu eğilimin giderek normalleşmeye başladığını görüyoruz. Ugly Betty, baş karakterini vasat görünümlü, kilolu Latin bir genç kız yapıp, aralarında eşcinsel bir ergen olan işçi sınıfı ailesinin hikayesini anlatıyor. Lost, İngilizce bilmeyen Koreli ve obez karakterleri; Heroes, sarsak Japonları; Grey’s Anatomy ise tombul lezbiyen ve kısa boylu zencileri ana karakterleri arasına koyuyor.

Yeni başlayan dizilerde ise azınlıkların öteki kimlikleri bir araya getirilerek, bir taşla birkaç kuş vuruluyor. Bu sene izleyeceğimiz dizilerde karşılaşacağımız karakterler arasında Müslüman bir eşcinsel, çekik gözlü bir İspanyolca hocası, Latin asıllı eşcinsel bir karakter, Orta Doğulu bir ‘redneck’ ve şişman bir vampir bulunuyor.

Birkaç yıl öncesine kadar kabul görmedikleri bir dünyada sağlam adımlarla ilerlemeye başlayan bu karakterleri kimlikleri ve Amerika’nın geldiği durumla rahatlıkla dalga geçerken görüyoruz artık. Etnik kimliğini çözemediğimiz, ama en azından beyaz olmadığını bildiğimiz bir adam hoşlandığı kadına evlenme teklifi ederken, “Endişelenme, azınlık olduğum için beni hayatım boyunca işten atamazlar,” diyor. Cnbc-e’de oynayan Aliens in America’nın Müslüman ortaokul öğrencisi Raja havaalanında namaz kılmaya kalktığı için, yanlarında kaldığı orta sınıf beyaz aileyle apar topar gözaltına alınıyor. Medeniyetler Çatışması, Amerika’nın azınlık oyuncularına yepyeni iş kapıları açmış gibi.

20 Aralık 09'da Akşam Pazar'da yayımlandı.

Christmas Eve, Santa and Nativity story on TV

We remember Christmas through our favorite TV shows, with Homer, Ross, Monica, Frasier and the Fisher family

Here comes some nostalgia with some of our favorite Christmas episodes from six TV shows, all part of TV history except for the Simpsons now in its 21st season. Remember when Homer Simpson told a sermon of the Nativity story with his own twist or when Elaine found her own Baby Jesus in Ally McBeal? In other shows, Frasier punched Santa when he co-hosted the annual Christmas Parade with Dr. Mary, and Ross and Monica did their routine on TV for the New Year’s Eve. Read on for the Golden Girls’ Christmas night, and how we met the most dysfunctional family on Christmas Eve, the Fishers of Six Feet Under.


Ally McBeal – Blue Christmas


The bizarre episodes of Ally McBeal become even more bizarre with Christmas. However, one of the more heart-breaking episodes occurred when Elaine found a six-week-old baby under a Nativity scene manger. The episode has Ally and John Cage fighting in court to get Elaine custody of the child, while the lawyers (even Ling) in the office discover the mothers and fathers in themselves. The episode also features Ally and Renee betting on who will sing the more suggestive holiday song in the bar.


Frasier – Mary Christmas


Frasier’s childhood dream comes true when he is asked to co-host Seattle’s annual Christmas Parade with Kelly Kirkland. Trying to impress Kelly, Frasier invites her to a dinner at his apartment. An unexpected food poisoning causes Frasier co-host the parade with Dr. Mary to his utter disappointment. When Dr. Mary announces the approach of Santa, something Frasier wanted to ever since he was a child, he loses it and ends punching Santa on the nose.


Friends – The One with the Routine


Among so many classic Christmas episodes from Friends (including one where Ross tries to explain his son the Hanukah with an armadillo costume), this one stuck in our memories with a dance routine Ross and Monica put on in Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve. While the Geller siblings embarrass themselves at the party, Chandler, Phoebe and Rachel try to uncover the Christmas presents Monica had bought them.


The Golden Girls – ‘Twas the Nightmare Before Christmas


This episode features the girls spending Christmas Eve together in Miami. Fed up with the financial burdens of Christmas, Dorothy suggests that each make their own gift to send one another. Rose’s wooden artifacts and Blanche’s racy calendars have Dorothy questioning her initially wise plan. Later, a snow blizzard delays their flights, causing the girls spend Christmas Eve in a diner listening to Blanche’s numerous sexual escapades from various Christmases of the past.


The Simpsons – Simpsons Christmas Stories


This three part Simpsons episode features an alternative take on the Nativity story, Grampa’s old relationship with Santa Claus, and a performance of the Nutcracker by the children of Springfield Elementary School. Homer gives a sermon on the first Christmas, with himself as Joseph, Marge as Mary, Bart as Baby Jesus, and Lisa as the angel Gabriel. The Christmas tree becomes the Hanukah bush in Homer’s version. We later find out how Grampa had a close encounter with Santa Claus on a deserted island in the Pacific during World War II and helped Santa rebuild his sleigh. In the final part, the residents of Springfield sing tunes from the Nutcracker as they go about their business, and Homer tries finding a Christmas present for Marge.


Six Feet Under – Pilot


We meet the Fisher family on a Christmas Eve with the death of patriarch Nathaniel Fisher. The Christmas dinner turns into something of a nightmare when the eldest son Nate comes home from Seattle, having just had sex in the airport, closeted gay son David bringing home his African-American boyfriend, and teenager Claire coming home stoned. A visit to both sons by the ghost of the father makes the Christmas dinner all the more unforgettable.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 18 Dec. 09

Gecenin Kanatları: Love, death and other unforgivable distractions


In a career spanning more than a decade, director Serdar Akar has given us everything from inspiring, to brutal, to commercial. Now, he adds yet another superlative to his filmography with the recent ‘Gecenin Kanatları’ (The Wings of the Night), tedious

When director Serdar Akar’s debut feature Gemide (On Board) was released more than a decade ago, both critics and audience felt the movie was a fresh breath of air in a period of decline for Turkish cinema. The intimate look into the world of men, complete with a slang-filled dialogue that actually sounded genuine, vowed many, and promised an inspiring young filmmaker for Turkish cinema. In the year 2000, came Dar Alanda Kısa Paslaşmalar (Offside, not be confused with another recent release, No Offsides), a modest movie featuring the legendary actress Müjde Ar that would establish Akar as a respected director.

In the last decade, however, Akar managed to confuse his followers and critics. He tried his craft in the occasional TV series, directed the mediocre movie adaptation of the hit TV series, Kurtlar Vadisi – Irak (Valley of the Wolves: Iraq), and in 2007, returned to the dark world of machismo with his violent Barda (In Bar), to relatively favorable reviews.


Kırmızıgül’s ‘films-to-do’


His latest, Gecenin Kanatları (The Wings of the Night), is yet another notch in Akar’s bizarre filmography. Before its release, many thought it was the latest in a line of box office hits from the pop singer-cum-filmmaker Mahsun Kırmızıgül, as the trailers blared the names of Kırmızıgül's previous two films. In reality, he was actually the co-writer of Gecenin Kanatları, with Ahmet Küçükkayalı.

The movie gives the feeling that it could very well have been directed by Kırmızıgül, with his trademark style as a filmmaker that mixes controversial social and national issues. His debut feature, Beyaz Melek (The White Angel), focused on the dire situation of senior citizens in Turkey, and touched here and there on Turkey’s problematic position with cultural diversity. His recent ground-breaking second feature, Güneşi Gördüm (I Saw the Sun), was a crafty blend of everything from state policies toward Kurdish citizens to migration and transgendered identities in Turkey.

Gecenin Kanatları plays like another movie on Kırmızıgül’s films-to-do list and is not even remotely reminiscent of the passionate style Akar displayed in either his earlier films or the recent Barda. In the film, Beren Saat, perhaps television's most popular actress at the moment, plays Gece (meaning Night, hence the name of the movie). Having seen both her parents executed in the aftermath of the 1980 coup, Gece channels her anger and revenge into becoming a devoted member of a leftist organization. She becomes a suicide bomber, only to fall for the professional athlete Yusuf (Murat Ünalmış), who lives next door.


Losing my connection


You know what to expect as Gece walks into a thin line between love and death. In Gecenin Kanatları, we’re supposed to be moved by the hard choice Gece has to make between Yusuf, with whom she's falling in love, and the deeply-rooted cause for which she's preparing to die. Sadly, the characters are never allowed to breathe and develop, leaving the audience unsatisfied as the drama unfolds on the screen.

As the movie delves into the terrorist organization, we are left to wonder what their cause is and for what they’re really willing to sacrifice their lives . The ambitious lines inserted into the mouths of the characters soon begin sounding like bad jokes, eventually turning Gece’s motives into nothing but bad jokes. After the first half hour, the viewer loses total connection with the characters. Even worse, the audience begins feeling that the actors have lost their connection as well.

The much-hyped sex scenes between Gece and Yusuf seem forced, and not even sexy, letting the audience lose the final sense of empathy for the love between the two. The movie feels rushed, incomplete, and very much like the plethora of mediocre TV series on Turkish channels. It's just there’s a plethora of them, and they are free.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 19 Dec. 09

The week in movies - 18 December 09

Get ready for the most anticipated movie of the year, Avatar, marking James Cameron’s return after 12 years. In other releases of the week, two films by Turkish female directors make their debut: İlksen Başarır’s unique love story, Başka Dilde Aşk (Love in Another Language) and Yeşim Sezgin’s romantic comedy, Süpürrr! (Sweep). The Turkish black comedy Vavien will please fans of the directing duo the Taylan Brothers, while Acı Aşk (Love, Bitter) is the weakest of this week’s releases.


Acı Aşk / Love, Bitter

Similar to last week’s release of novelist-cum-filmmaker Tuna Kiremitçi’s Adını Sen Koy (You Name It), this film portrays another love triangle of the upper-middle class and is set in Eskişehir. The story of Acı Aşk moves from Eskişehir to Istanbul, and the love triangle becomes a love quadrangle with the leading man Orhan (Halit Ergenç) finding out the price of playing the field with three women. The film stars Songül Öden, Ezgi Asaroğlu and the beautiful but annoying Cansu Dere. Newcomer A. Taner Elhan directs, while director/writer (of Polis/Police) Onur Ünlü writes the script. Heralded with the tag line “What’s the most you can do for love?” the trailer promises lame a dialog.

Who should watch it? Those who get a kick out of cardboard characters and far-from-subtle cliché romances as found in a recent avalanche of Turkish TV series.

Who should avoid it? Those who cringe when hearing over-the-top lines like, “I’m asking the biggest of all questions. How far are you willing to come with me?” (The answer, of course, is “Until death.”)


Avatar

The most-anticipated film of the month – and, for some, the most-anticipated film of 2009 – comes to theaters this week everywhere around the globe. James Cameron – King of the World back in 1998 with the epic Titanic – returns to form following an absence from feature movies for 12 years. The trailers and the story don’t explain much of what we’re about to watch in movie theaters. Ex-Marine Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) goes on an expedition to find the next energy resource on the distant moon of Pandora. Sully’s DNA is unique in bonding with the alien hybrid body, the Avatar. As he infiltrates the natives of Pandora, the Na’vi, Sully finds himself falling for a native girl, Neytiri. One of the few who had the chance to watch the pre-screening, Time magazine’s Richard Corliss sums up his experience as “the most vivid and convincing creation of a fantasy world ever seen in the history of moving pictures.”

Who should watch it? Everyone who has a remote interest in movies.

Who should avoid it? Those who are averse to fantasy worlds in movies.


Başka Dilde Aşk / Love in Another Language

Newcomer Turkish director İlksen Başarır’s unique take on a love story wowed the audience and critics in the recent Golden Oranges and Bursa’s Silk Road Film Festival. Mert Fırat (he’s also the co-writer with Başarır) stars as Onur, a young deaf man who finds himself in a sweeping romance with Zeynep (Saadet Işıl Aksoy of Yumurta/Egg and Süt/Milk), a woman working in a call center. Fırat’s performance, the chemistry between the leading actors and Hayk Kirakosyan’s cinematography were among the highlights from critics. The film features veteran actress Lale Mansur as Onur’s protective mother.

Who should watch it? Those who do not want to miss the occasional Turkish film by a female director or miss an honest love story among the multitude of pretentious ones.

Who should avoid it? Those who do not want to take a risk on another love story from a Turkish director.


Süpürrr! / Sweep

One of two debut movies released this week by a Turkish female director comes in the form of a romantic comedy/sports comedy. Boy meets girl, boy wants to marry girl, girl’s father has a weird obsession to marry his daughter to a national athlete, boy begins mastering the unheard sport of curling. Director Yeşim Sezgin’s quest of training the cast to master curling and building a curling rink for the first time in Turkey made headlines during filming. Cem Kılıç plays the naïve and lovestruck Oğuz, and Başak Parlak plays the girl who has the power to kick start a curling team in Turkey.

Who should watch it? Those who enjoy sports comedies and those who want to learn what the heck curling is.

Who should avoid it? Those who have their plates full with a string of mediocre romantic comedies from Turkish cinema.


Vavien

Turkey’s answer to Wachowski or the Coen Brothers, the Taylan Brothers return to screen with their third feature. Written by actor Engin Günaydın, the movie stars Günaydın and Binnur Kaya, back together after the popular TV series Avrupa Yakası (The European Side). The two go against-the-trend in this black comedy about the fall of a family. Günaydın plays Celal, a man who tries finding ways of escape from his drab existence through frequenting sleazy night clubs. His wife Sevilay, meanwhile, accumulates money her father has been sending to her secretly. Things go awry when Celal finds out about the money and decides to get rid of his wife for good.

Who should watch it? Those who were impressed with the Taylan Brothers’ previous feature Küçük Kıyamet (The Little Apocalypse) of 2006.

Who should avoid it? Those who are not ready to see the Günaydın-Kaya duo in totally different roles than the one associated with them in the hit series, Avrupa Yakası.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 18 Dec. 09

The Prisoner: Ben 'Köy'de tutuklu kaldım

1960’ların İngiliz dizisi ‘The Prisoner’ın yeniden uyarlamasında, ismi bir numaraya dönüşen 6 içine düştüğü alternatif gerçeklikten kurtulmaya çalışıyor

Sinemada kıyamet sonrası bir dünyanın kahramanı 9’u izledikten sonra, bu numarayı ters çevirip, bir başka çivisi çıkmış dünyanın kahramanı 6’nın akıl oyunlarını bu Pazar akşamından itibaren her hafta televizyonda izleyebilirsiniz. Cnbc-e’de altı hafta devam edecek mini dizi The Prisoner, Jim Caviezel’in oynadığı kahramanımızın kendini bir çölün ortasında bulmasıyla başlıyor. Kendisinden yardım isteyen yaşlı bir adam ölmeden 554’ü bulmasını istiyor. Çölün ilerisinde 1950’lerin steril Amerikan banliyölerini ve The Truman Show’un yapay kasabasını hatırlatan bir yerleşim merkezine ulaşıyor. Yalnızca Köy olarak adlandırılan bu mekanda herkese bir numarayla hitap ediliyor, kahramanımızın numarasının da 6 olduğunu öğreniyoruz.

Parça parça hatırladığı geçmişi ve geldiği New York’la sembolize edilen gerçek dünyayı kimsenin bilmediğini gören 6, Köy’ün despot lideri 2’nin kendisi ve geldiği dünya hakkında daha fazlasını bildiğini fark ediyor. Ian McKellen’ın canlandırdığı 2, bunalımlı oğlu ve komadaki karısıyla yaşadığı dev malikane ve açık renk keten takımlarıyla sömürge sonrası İngilizler’in dingin ve tepeden bakan yaşamlarının taklidiyle Köy sakinlerini yönetiyor.


Totaliter devlet, büyük şirkete karşı

Nasıl bir akıl hapishanesinde tutuklu olduğunu anlamaya çalışan 6, bir yandan bu yapay dünyadan bir çıkış yolu ararken, bir yandan da Köy’ün diğer sakinlerinin gözlerini açmaya çalışıyor. Çabaladıkça da, cevap yerine daha fazla sorunun ve giderek karanlıklaşan bir dünyanın içinde buluyor kendini. Böylece de, kendisini hatırladığımız The Passion of Christ’taki İsa rolüne farklı bir şekilde yeniden giriyor.

The Prisoner, 1960’larda televizyona yeni bir soluk getiren aynı isimli İngiliz dizisinin yeniden uyarlaması. Orijinali ve 2009 versiyonu arasındaki felsefi ve kavramsal farklılıklar ise yeni diziyi uyarlamadan çok bir yeniden yorum olarak konumlandırıyor. Soğuk Savaş dönemi ve kimyasal uyuşturucularla şekillenen 1960’ların alternatif kültürüne denk gelen orijinal dizideki ajan 6, günümüzde büyük bir şirket çalışanına, totaliter devlet de yeni teknolojilerle güçlenen büyük bir şirkete dönüşüyor. Her Pazar 22.00’de izleyebileceğiniz The Prisoner’dan keyif alabilmek için mantıklı sorular sormak yerine, bu yeni dünyanın garipliklerine kendinizi bırakmanız gerekiyor.

Bunları seviyorsanız kaçırmayın: Dollhouse, The Lost Room, V, The Prisoner 1968 (2009 verisyonunun gösterildiği kanal AMC’nin web sitesinden izleyebilirsiniz)

13 Aralık 2009'da Akşam Pazar'da yayımlandı.

Novelist Kiremitçi's debut film crumbles

Novelist, poet, musician and columnist Tuna Kiremitçi is back again, this time with overambitious plans to be a filmmaker. Kiremitçi puts his signature as writer and director on his debut feature, 'Adını Sen Koy' (You Name It), yet another mediocre movie in a series of films on the upper-middle-class bourgeoisie

“Writers should be read, but neither seen nor heard.” Daphne du Maurier’s words capture perfectly the sentiments most of us feel for writer-cum-musician-cum-filmmaker Tuna Kiremitçi.

Over-exposed doesn’t do justice to Kiremitçi’s career spanning a decade of novels, poetry, rock albums, a regular column and, finally, a film in theaters.

Having wowed Turkish readers with his debut novel, Git Kendini Çok Sevdirmeden (Leave Before I Fall In), Kiremitçi soon became the voice of the lovelorn and melancholic with his subsequent novels, including Bu İşte Bir Yalnızlık Var (The Way of Loneliness) and Dualar Kalıcıdır (Prayers Stay the Same).

Two novels in 2005, Yolda Üç Kişi (Three on the Road) and A.Ş.K. Neyin Kısaltması? (What is L.O.V.E.?), coincided with the author’s very public affair with daily Vatan’s romance columnist, İclal Aydın. Both had publicized relationships with their exes in the past, and the media had a field day following the two writers in love. The affair soon ended, but Kiremitçi landed a column at Vatan that he writes to this day while continuing to pen novels.

His occasional flirting with music became a part of his public persona, and he recently announced he would end his career as a novelist. The prolific artist that he is, Kiremitçi’s announcement coincided with trailers for an upcoming movie, Adını Sen Koy (You Name It), that he wrote and directed.


On love, friendship, life, death and everything else

The trailers promised to touch a soft spot for the Turkish audience, a heartbreaking love story among the urban upper-middle class. For the cynics out there, the film was an unabashed attempt to cash in on last year’s audience favorite, Issız Adam (Alone). Turkey’s answer to Love Story, the movie was set among the thirty-something bourgeoisie of Istanbul.

That female lead Melis Birkan played similar roles in both films was enough to fuel the comparisons. The poster for Adını Sen Koy is an obvious homage to the hit 1990s' movie Trainspotting, designed either to draw or alienate the demographic associated with the Danny Boyle film.

In trying to explain his movie, Kiremitçi reminds us of the soppy, overambitious and pretentious romanticism of his novels: “At its core, it’s a love story... I also wanted the film to be on friendship, life, death and a little bit about insanity. I’ve tried looking at all of these concepts through the mirror of love.”

Adını Sen Koy is the story of a love triangle journeying toward doom in the last week before a marriage. Aybige (Birkan) and Can (Ali İl, making his move from television to cinema) are about to get married. Things become weird when Can’s best friend, Ilgaz (Cemal Toktaş), comes from Germany to attend the wedding and an unexpected tension between fiancée and friend emerges.


Ambitious lines in a jumbled script

The dynamics, history, source and justification of the awkward relationship among the three main characters were probably very clear in Kiremitçi’s head, but the audience has a hard time putting the pieces together and trying to make sense of the increasing mess as the movie progresses.

The motivations, longings and confusions of the characters stay on the surface as mere lines in a jumbled script. Ambitious lines such as “Do you know what love is? It’s giving up all the women in the world for one woman” soon begin sounding as urgent as a school crush.

Similar to what Yıldız Kültür did as Alper’s mother in Issız Adam, however, Ahmet Mümtaz Taylan, as Ilgaz’s suicidal brother, raises the bar whenever he enters the scene.

Close-up shots dominate the film, creating the feeling that one is watching a TV drama on screen. Beautiful shots of Eskişehir by cinematographer Soykut Turan might be the only high point of the movie.

Adını Sen Koy once again shows Turkish TV and cinema’s unfortunate inability to create an accurate and honest picture of thirty-something urbanites – perhaps due to the very recent emergence of that demographic. With the exception of last year’s Ara (Between) by Ümit Ünal, a series of films continues to portray an unrealistic, pretentious and trite picture of newly emerging upper-middle-class urban life.

Adını Sen Koy, unfortunately, adds yet another film to this corpus.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 13 Dec. 09

The week in movies - 11 December

Capitalism: A Love Story

The man who single-handedly transformed documentaries into pop entertainment returns with yet another in-your-face criticism of the American system. Michael Moore takes his slacker/anarchist filmmaker persona to the next level with his next slap at the American establishment as he delves into the reasons behind the economic meltdown. Moore’s uniquely personal style and loud voice that entertained the anti-establishment audience everywhere in Fahrenheit 9/11 and Sicko continue in this documentary.

Who should watch it? Those who have enjoyed Moore’s sensationalist take on the American establishment in his previous films.

Who should avoid it? Those who enjoy their documentaries with a distant, aloof narrative, and supposed objectivity.


Gecenin Kanatları / The Wings of the Night

Turkish director Serdar Akar returns to screen following his controversial Barda (In the Bar) of 2007. Popular actress Beren Saat stars as Gece. Haunted by a tragedy that claimed the lives of her parents following the 1980 coup, Gece becomes a suicide bomber. The film centers on a tragic love story between her and Yusuf (Murat Ünalmış), a professional athlete. The script is co-written by Turkey’s pop singer and respected filmmaker Mahsun Kırmızıgül.

Who should watch it? Those who are following Kırmızıgül’s career with awe following Beyaz Melek (White Angel) and Güneşi Gördüm (I Saw the Sun), a possible Oscar contender.

Who should avoid it? Those who are tired of watching another movie on the 1980 coup and its aftermath.


No Ofsayt / No Offsides

This football comedy is heralded as the big advertisement persona Ali Taran’s first movie project. Produced and written by Ali Taran, the film is directed by the real-life couple Mehmet Bahadır Er and Maryna Gorbach whose debut feature, Kara Köpekler Havlarken (Black Dogs Barking), met with generally favorable reviews. The film stars Yıldırım Memişoğlu as Ali Tarantula, a combination of Memişoğlu’s unforgettable ad personality Ali Desidero of the 1990s, and Taran’s larger-than-life ego.

Who should watch it? Curious moviegoers who want to see the transformation of Taran from ad-man to filmmaker and those who have enjoyed the debut feature of the directors.

Who should avoid it? Those who find the hapless everyday man in a big city, personified by Arif of Cem Yılmaz flicks and Recev İvedik, as repetitive and boring.


Saw VI

Jigsaw makes a return to his deadly games in this final installment of the horror series with no intention of returning to obscurity. Once again, a familiar name from the previous movies, Kevin Greutert, tries his hand at directing. In the sixth installment, there is an anti-Capitalist message the Jigsaw is willing to give to his victims, who are mortgage lenders and health insurance adjusters.

Who should watch it? Those who are planning to watch a sixth movie in a franchise will no doubt know who they are.

Who should avoid it? Those who have no interest in the brilliance of a deadly game in horror movies and those who have no interest in horror movies.

Originally published in Hürriyet Daily News on 11 Dec. 09

Shane Acker’s '9'

Puppet robots fight evil machines in a post-apocalyptic world in ‘9’. Shane Acker moves into feature film, following his Oscar-nominated short animation of the same name and delivering his impressive trademark ‘steampunk'

This year will be the year of nines in movies. Squeezing between the recent District 9, the upcoming musical Nine, and the German independent film Cloud 9, comes Shane Acker’s post-apocalyptic animation 9 to theaters this week. Movie enthusiasts will no doubt be familiar with Acker’s foray into feature film. The boy wonder impressed the American Academy and later such masters of fantasy like Tim Burton and Timur Bekmambetov (of Wanted) with his short animation 9 back in 2005.

The most appropriate way to explain the feature 9 would be to call it an extended version of the short 9. The movie begins in a post-apocalyptic world in the near future, reminiscent of WALL-E, with bleak colors and sad remains of a civilized world now in ruins. The hero here is another robot, 9 (voiced by Elijah Wood), looking more like a postmodern ragged doll. Machines have destroyed mankind, including a scientist who breathed life into nine puppet robots. 9 meets its predecessors in what could loosely be called a primitive community, led by the autocrat 1 (Christopher Plummer), and including the sidekick 5 (John C. Reilly) and the only woman robot, 7 (Jennifer Connelly).

As the group of numbered robots cooperates to fight the evil machines, they showcase human qualities like compassion, self-importance and a sense of humor. 9 reminds one of another sci-fi classic, the 1960s’ TV classic The Prisoner with its inhabitants of the Village referred to as numbers who find the power of community the hard way. The 2009 remake starts this Sunday on cnbc-e. Acker dubbed his design of the homely feel of his robots “stitchpunk,” and later fans called his unique visualization of machinery as “steampunk.” Why these invented words have stuck with so many moviegoers is a testament to the power of Acker’s imagination and the unique world he has created. The disappointment comes in the form of the story as 9 barely delivers what the original short film gave us, becoming yet another cautionary tale on virtues of human values in the manner of children’s animation.

Originally Published in Hürriyet Daily News on 11 Dec. 2009

Oscar’a doğru, bağımsız filmler

Irak Savaşı, Amerikan gıda endüstrisi ve orta sınıfın çöküşüyle, Amerikan bağımsız sineması dünyanın gidişatı konusunda pek de umutlu bir tablo çizmiyor. Geçen hafta dağıtılan Gotham Bağımsız Film Ödülleri’nde ödül alan filmlerden bazılarına bakalım.

The Hurt Locker

Uzun süredir ismini duymadığımız yönetmen Kathryn Bigelow’un (Strange Days'i hatırlayan var mı?) Irak Savaşı’nda bir bomba imha ekibinin gerilimli öyküsünü anlattığı filmi, En İyi Film ve Oyuncu Kadrosu ödüllerini aldı. Eleştirilerin çoğunda, ‘Irak Savaşı üzerine çekilmiş en etkileyici film’ tanımı karşımıza çıkıyor.


Food, Inc.

Robert Kenner’in En İyi Belgesel ödülü alan filmi, Amerikan gıda sektörünü, yasal düzenlemeleri ve ürkütücü yeme alışkanlıklarını sansasyondan uzak durup, ayrıntılı bir şekilde anlatıyor. Fast Food Nation'ın kaldığı yerden devam eden film, sağlam duruşuyla bizde de GDO konusunu merak edenlere hitap ediyor.


The Maid

Şilili yönetmen Sebastian Silva, değişen sosyal sınıfları orta yaşlı bir hizmetçinin yıllar içinde giderek büyüyen öfkesiyle anlatıyor. Filmi izleyen hemen herkesi büyüleyen ve En Başarılı Yeni Oyuncu ödülü alan Catalina Saavedra, Oscar adaylığına yaklaşan isimlerden.

6 Aralık 2009'da Akşam Pazar'da yayımlandı.

Bir vampir dizisine daha hazır mısınız?

Popüler kültürü dört bir yandan istila eden vampirlere Stefan ve kardeşi Damon da katılıyor. Lise öğrencilerini ve vampirleri bir kez daha bir araya getiren yeni dizi ‘The Vampire Diairies’ MyMax’te


Vampirler hakkında bir yazı daha okursanız cinnet geçirip en yakınınızdakini dişleyeceğinizi düşünüyorsanız, size kötü haberlerimiz var. True Blood, Twilight ve konu dizimiz The Vampire Diaries derken, popüler kültür meydanını boş bulan vampirlerin şimdilik mezarlarına dönmeye pek niyetleri yok gibi gözüküyor.

Lise öğrencisi bir kız, okula yeni gelen seksi, gizemli çocuktan hoşlanıyor. Kız henüz bilmese de, biz çocuğun bir vampir olduğunu biliyoruz. Sözünü ettiğimiz ergen kız ve ergen görünümlü vampir, Twillight serisinin Bella ve Edward’ı değil. Bu hafta Digiturk’ün MyMax kanalında başlayan The Vampire Diaries dizisinden bir başka liseli kız-vampir oğlan çifti, Elena ve Stefan.

Twilight kitaplarından çok önce yayımlanan bir seriden uyarlanan bu dizinin, dünyayı hop oturtup hop kaldıran Twilight’la benzerliği bu noktada sona eriyor. Yakın zamanda anne ve babasını kaybetmiş olan Elena (Nina Dobrev), problemli erkek kardeşi Jeremy ve yanlarına taşınan teyzesiyle yeni bir hayata başlamaya çalışırken kasabaya yeni taşınan Stefan’dan (Paul Wesley) etkilenmeye başlıyor. Stefan, durgun mu gizemli mi anlayamadığınız antisosyal vampir duruşuyla, Mystic Falls kasabasındaki her genç kızın yüreğini hoplatıyor. Onun gönlü ise, 1864 yılındaki en büyük aşkı Katherine’e tıpa tıp benzediği için Elena’ya kayıyor.


Dawson vampir olsaydı


The Vampire Diaries’in arkasında Dawson’s Creek’in yaratıcısı Kevin Williamson ile Gossip Girl ve Kyle XY’da çalışmış olan bir ekip olduğu için de, diziye birbirinden renkli genç karakterler giriyor. Uyuşturucu bağımlısı erkek kardeş, amigo kız ve futbolcu prototipleri, ezik eski sevgili, vampirlere baharat katma amaçlı eklenmiş cadılar ve de diziye sürekli taze kan pompalamakla görevli, Stefan’ın kötü vampir kardeşi Damon (Lost’un Boone’u Ian Somerhalder), dizinin kalabalık kadrosunda yerlerini alıyorlar.

Williamson’ın zamanında Dawson ve Joey’ye verdiği zeki ergen diyaloglar burada da karakterleri kısa sürede sevdiğiniz ya da gıcık kaptığınız gerçek insanlara dönüştürüyor. Öğretmenleri bile utandıran tarih bilgisi ve insanüstü futbol becerileriyle lisedeki herkesi etkileyen Stefan sıkıcılaşmaya başladığında işin içine ahlaki değerleri tersyüz olmuş kötü kardeş Damon giriyor. Damon gelişigüzel öldürüyor ve her cinayetinden de ayrı bir gurur duyuyor.

The Vampire Diaries’i ideal dizi yapan özelliği ise sürekli izleyiciyi şaşırtabilmesi. Tahmin ettikleriniz gerçekleşse bile, hiç beklemediğiniz bir şekilde oluyor. Bir sezona yayılmasını beklediğimiz, Stefan’ın vampir olduğunun sevgilisi tarafından keşfedilmesi kısa sürede gerçekleşiyor ve kalıcı sandığınız karakterler bir vampir ısırığıyla diziden ayrılabiliyorlar. Elena’nın klişe günlük notlarına ve ender olarak araya sıkıştırılan başarısız tarihi sahnelere katlanabilirseniz, The Vampire Diaries gençlik ve doğaüstü türlerinin güzel bir karışımı olarak, vampirleri bir süreliğine daha aramıza buyur ediyor.

Bunları seviyorsanız kaçırmayın: Dawson’s Creek, Smallville, Supernatural

6 Aralık 2009'da Akşam Pazar'da yayımlandı.

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