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Turkish net forced to bail on hit tale

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  • Turkish net forced to bail on hit tale

    Variety Magazine
    Feb 24 2007

    Turkish net forced to bail on hit tale

    13,000 complaints sent following premiere

    By ALI JAAFAR Hit Turkish skein "Valley of the Wolves: Terror" has
    been yanked only one episode into its new run following complaints
    the show could incite sectarian violence.
    Turkish satcaster Show TV, which aired the series, was reportedly
    warned by regulator RTUK it would lose its license if it didn't pull
    the show, after 13,000 complaints were received following the season
    preem.

    Execs at both RTUK and Show TV have been quick to point the finger at
    each other for the decision to nix the show, which garnered auds of
    30 million and a 48% market share.

    Execs from Pana Film, the shingle behind the franchise, were clear on
    whom they blamed however.

    "We have been given no official explanation, and the RTUK now deny
    they ordered the show to be cancelled, but we know that they told
    Show TV they would cancel their license if they continued to show
    it," says Pana spokesman Tugba Mutaf.

    "Valley of the Wolves: Terror" depicted Kurdish separatist violence
    over the past two decades. Even though Pana officials claimed the
    show "portrayed Turks and Kurds as brothers," sensitivity in Turkey
    over the representation of rival nationalist aspirations has been
    particularly high ever since the assassination of Turkish-Armenian
    editor Hrant Dink in January by an ultra-nationalist Turkish
    teenager.

    This isn't the first controversy to hit the "Valley of the Wolves"
    producers. Last year, a bigscreen spinoff of wildly popular series
    "Valley of the Wolves: Iraq" took the Turkish box office by storm,
    attracting some 6 million admissions to become the country's
    highest-ever grosser.

    Pic -- which showed Turkish troops sent to the avenge atrocities by
    Americans and their allies, including Israel -- was pulled from
    German theaters following accusations of anti-Semitism.

    It's unclear what will happen to the rest of "Valley of the Wolves:
    Terror" series. Producers had already wrapped the second episode. A
    further 13 were planned.

    "We want to show this to our people. We're looking at releasing it on
    DVD, on the internet or maybe turning it onto a film," says Mutaf.
    "Maybe some people are afraid of showing who's behind this terror."
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