Mar 11

Nuri Bilge Ceyaln has been listed as 17th in the 50 greatest European directors currently working within the field by LastSite.

According to article each has been rated and the results are a comprehensive top 50. Directors are scored by their average IMDB score (all their film scores divided by total films), the amount of awards they have won and been nominated for and finally three categories judged by LastSite (Style, Originality, and Filmography, that being the strengh of their entire body of work)

All profiles taken from either IMDB, The Auteurs or Wikipedia.

Awards and nominations compiled from the following awarding bodies: Cannes, Sundance, Berlin Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival, Academy Awards, BAFTAs, Golden Globes and European film institute awards.

17. Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Turkey 1959)

Auteurs Profile:

Nuri Bilge Ceylan (born 26 January 1959 in Istanbul) is a Turkish photographer and film director. He is married to the filmmaker, photographer, and actress Ebru Ceylan, his co-star in İklimler.

Ceylan learned photography at age 15, and developed an interest in film at 22. After graduating from Boğaziçi University with a BSc degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering, he went on with his studies on cinema for two years at Mimar Sinan University.

Ceylan’s first short film Koza (Cocoon) was screened in the Cannes Film Festival in 1995. He received many awards with his debut feature Kasaba (Small Town). His third feature Uzak (Distant) received many awards including the Grand Jury Prize and the Best Actor Prize at Cannes, and was praised internationally. His 2006 film Iklimler (Climates) won the FIPRESCI Movie Critics’ Award at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival and received international praise by critics and experts. The film won 5 awards at the 2006 Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival, bringing him the “Best Director” title. During the preparation of this movie, Ceylan turned his attentions to photography again. He won the best director award in the 2008 Cannes Film Festival for Üç Maymun (Three Monkeys). At the end of his speech, Ceylan stated, “I dedicate this award to my beautiful and lonely country, which I love passionately.”

Filmography (By IMDB Votes):

(7.60) – Uzak (2002)
(7.30) – Üç maymun (2008)
(7.30) – Mayis Sikintisi (1999)
(7.20) – Iklimler (2006)
(7.02) – Kasaba (1997)
(6.94) – Koza (1995)

Trade Mark: He is also a photographer which shows through the cinematography in his film.He loves snow very much and he always uses it in his films.

Last Site Favorite Film: Uzak
Upcoming: None as yet

Average IMDB Rating: 7.23
Awards: 6
Nominations: 7
Style (LastSite Rating out of 20) 16
Originality (LastSite Rating out of 20) 16
Filmography (LastSite Rating out of 20): 16
Total: 68.23

Lastsite’s Top 50 European Directors Currently Working

Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s IMDB

Official Website

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Mar 04

Gemeinsam sind wir stark from pinar bektore on Vimeo.

Animasyon / Animation: Pınar Bektöre
Söz / Text: Daniel Wagenbreth
Müzik / Instrumental: Florian Weisbrich
Rap / Rap: Daniel Wagenbreth
Vokal 1 / Gesang1: Loredana
Vokal 2 /Gesang2: Fillipo Timpone
Release: Hotbockz Sampler (2008)

Unter dem Namen „Gemeinsam sind wir stark“ wurde das Lied, in dem es thematisch um Kindesmissbrauch geht, bereits 2007 von DBLuDee (englisch „WD“) alias Daniel Wagenbreth verfasst und veröffentlicht.
Anfang 2009 sprach Pinar Bektöre Daniel Wagenbreth an, nachdem Sie von dem Lied und der Schoolparty Projektreihe erfahren hatte. Sie schlug vor ein Animationsvideo zum Song „Gemeinsam sind wir stark“ zu erarbeiten.
——-
Çocuk suistimalini konu alan, „Gemeinsam sind wir stark“ (Beraber güçlüyüz) adındaki şarkı, 2007 yılında DBLuDee diğer adıyla Daniel Wagenbreth tarafından kaleme alındı ve yayınlandı.

2009 yılının sonlarında Pinar Bektöre tarafından yapılmaya başlanan animasyonu 2010 başında tamamlandı.

http://www.hotbockz.de/
http://www.myspace.com/dbludee

http://www.pinarbektore.de


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Feb 26

Director: Fatih Akin
Writer: Fatih Akin, Adam Bousdoukos Cast: Adam Bousdoukos, Moritz Bleibtreu, Birol Ünel, Anna Bederke, Lucas Gregorowicz, Udo Kier Country: Germany

The film won the Special Jury Prize at the recent Venice International Film Festival and it can expect more rewards on the festival circuit and a welcome from art house audiences everywhere. It’s a delightful change of pace for director and co-writer Akin, whose “Head On” and “The Edge of Heaven” dealt with very serious stuff.

Co-writer Adam Bousdoukos plays energetic and likeable opportunist Zinos Kazantsakis, who runs a popular restaurant called Soul Kitchen in a neglected area of Hamburg. He prepares stodgy fare such as frozen pizza, fish fingers, hamburgers and macaroni and cheese; the service is abrupt and the music is loud but the customers are happy.

But then a tax collector takes away his sound system in lieu of back taxes, his girlfriend Nadine (Pheline Roggan) jets off to a new job in China, and his no-account brother Illias (Moritz Bleibtreu) is let out of prison on parole.

Intending to join Nadine in Shanghai, Zinos hires new chef Shayn (Birol Unel) after seeing him get fired from a classy restaurant because he refused to serve warm gazpacho.

Shayn, however, is a culinary purist and he declines to serve the dross that is the mainstay of the Soul Kitchen. He promises Zinos that he will make four dishes that his customers will love.

Almost overnight, the place is empty as the regulars flee from Shayn’s cooking and the noise of a raggedy rock band that Zinos has allowed to play in place of his confiscated sound system. On top of that, Zinos throws his back out while renovating his kitchen to please health inspectors and an old pal-turned-real estate speculator, Neumann (Wotan Wilke Mohring), starts hounding him to sell the property so he can flatten it for development.

The film follows Zinos in his attempts to save his restaurant, solve his back pain, win back his girlfriend and keep his brother out of jail. It’s all done with flair and a great deal of fun. The personable Bousdoukos actually owned a Hamburg restaurant for several years and he is right at home in the lead role. In a fine ensemble with many well-drawn smaller characters, Bleibtreu (“Run Lola Run,” “The Baader-Meinhof Complex”) as the hapless brother, Unel (“Head On”) as the fussy chef and Bederke, as a waitress, all stand out.

With brisk pacing, sharp ideas and eclectic music, Akin and cinematographer Rainer Klausmann make “Soul Kitchen” a place for audiences to savor.

resource: Reuters Ray Bennett

Reviews:
Bakiniz: Ruhumuzun Mutfagi
Indiewire Michael Koresky

Other
Fatih Akin’s BIO
Soul Kitchen’s Official Website


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Feb 26

Dir: Ferzan Ozpetek. Italy. 2010. 113mins.
Cast: Riccardo Scamarcio, Nicole Grimaudo, Alessandro Preziosi, Ennio Fantastichini, Lunetta Saviano, Elena Sofia Ricci, Ilaria Occhini. Production companies: Fandango Screenwriter: Ivan Cotroneo, Ferzan Ozpetek Producer: Domenico Procacci. Director of photography: Maurizio Calvesi.Production designer: Andrea Crisanti.Music: Pasquale Catalano. Costume designer: Alessandro Lai
Editor: Patrizio Marrone. Sales: Fandango Portobello Sales


With its themes of family secrets, oddball character parts, bittersweet tone and sunny outlook, this is the easily the most Almodovar-esque of all Ozpetek’s films.

This film suggests that Ferzan Ozpetek is moving towards a contemporary revival of the commedia all’italiana genre, which can only be good for him and for audiences Italian to its core, the film will work especially on home ground, where it is set for release on March 12 through 01 Distribuzione. It may be old hat in Hollywood, but Ozpetek proves that in other territories there is still plenty of mileage in the coming out story, not least because provincial attitudes lag well behind the urban norms. Unfortunately, however, this could mean that the mainly metropolitan audience for foreign language fare might view this as a sweet but rather dated curio that’s a little too broad to be taken seriously.

Set in Lecce, a sandstone city in the heel of the Italian boot, the film focuses on the extended Cantone family, who make pasta on an industrial scale. Within three minutes, Ozpetek’s restless camera is circling a table of happy Italians eating their meal in the courtyard of a big old Pugliese house: youngest son Tommaso (Italy’s current favourite romantic lead Riccardo Scamarcio) is just back from his studies in Rome, while serious elder brother Antonio (Preziosi) manages the pasta factory. Haughty mother Stefania (Savino), jovial but over-demanding father Vincenzo (Fantastichini), wise grandmother Oma (Occhini), and eccentric, sexy aunt Luciana (Ricci) complete the family portrait.

But their prosperous contentment turns out to be a sham. The next day, Tommaso confesses to his brother that he harbours ambitions to be a writer and is studying literature in Rome rather than business. He also announces that he is gay. But that evening Tommaso is trumped when, just as he is about to announce his secret, Antonio steps in and drops his own bombshell – he himself is gay, and has been having an affair with a worker at the factory.

Unbelieving and then incensed, patriarch Vincenzo casts Antonio out of the family nest, and then suffers a minor heart attack – at which point Tommaso is forced to put his own revelations on hold and step into the family business he’s been trying all his life to get away from.

Ozpetek has changed co-writers a few times recently, but in Ivan Cotroneo, he seems to have found a congenial spirit able to channel that mix of social comedy and social comment that the director has always favoured but never quite nailed. Stories of unrequited love – including a sequence involving the grandmother – lend emotional heft, while Tommaso’s attempts to teach his parents some modicum of tolerance while keeping his own secret under wraps provide some moments of comedy.

But the all-out laughs only kick in when Tommaso’s boyfriend and three other gay friends turn up from Rome, and are sold to the townspeople by proud Vincenzo as ‘lock up your daughters’ lotharios.

There’s a sense in Loose Cannons that Ozpetek, after experimenting with ever more lurid forms of melodrama, is moving towards a contemporary revival of the commedia all’italiana genre. Which can only be good for him – and for audiences.

Resource: Screen International

Related Links:

Bakiniz

Variety Loose Cannons

Hollywood Reporter

Ozpetek’s Official Website

Ferzan Ozpetek’s BIO:

Internet Movie Databse

Feb 26

A Kaplan Film Prod. (Turkey)/Heimatfilm (Germany) production, in association with ZDF, Arte. (International sales: the Match Factory, Cologne.) Produced by Semih Kaplanoglu. Co-producers, Johannes Rexin, Bettina Brokemper. Directed by Semih Kaplanoglu. Screenplay, Kaplanoglu, Orcun Koksal.
With: Bora Altas, Erdal Besikcioglu, Tulin Ozen.

The final seg of self-styled Turkish auteur Semih Kaplanoglu’s “Honey, Milk, Egg” trilogy (shot, natch, in reverse order) deals with its blank central character’s childhood in the heavily wooded mountains of Rize province, northeast Turkey. The best-looking of the three and the most conventionally structured, this is still grindingly slow, content-light fare for card-carrying minimalists. Fest sidebars and Euro pubcaster slots loom.

With new d.p. Baris Ozbicer on board, Kaplanoglu appears to have discovered the visual merits of narrow depth of field and foreground framing devices, especially in the many schoolroom scenes and home interiors centered on its lonely protag, 6-year-old Yusuf (Bora Altas). Tyke’s dad, Yakup (Erdal Besikcioglu), is a beekeeper who works deep in the forest; his mom, Zehra (Tulin Ozen), works on a tea plantation.

Read the related news
Screendaily
International FIlm Festival
Turkish Zaman
Review
Variety Review by Derek Alley
Honey — Film Review By Ray Bennett
Interviews
Listen @Acik radyo in Turkish
Other
Semih Kaplanoglu Bio


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