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Ottoman Rogue Is Latest Turkish Movie Hero

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  • Ottoman Rogue Is Latest Turkish Movie Hero

    OTTOMAN ROGUE IS LATEST TURKISH MOVIE HERO
    By Daren Butler

    Reuters, UK
    March 14 2007

    ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkish cinema audiences love their heroes and the
    brawling, roguish womanizer Yandim Ali -- who takes on British forces
    occupying Istanbul in "The Last Ottoman" -- fits the bill perfectly.

    The film, set during the break-up of the Ottoman Empire at the end
    of World War One, taps into a growing wave of nationalism in Turkish
    cinema which has fed on historical themes and current issues such as
    the war in neighboring Iraq.

    Exploiting the popularity of Turkish television stars, local films
    are now mounting a major challenge to the Hollywood productions which
    used to dominate cinema screens here.

    The mass-market local productions are also much more of a hit with
    audiences at home than the Turkish art house movies that have won
    critical acclaim abroad.

    Mustafa Sevki Dogan, director of "The Last Ottoman," is under no
    illusions about the recipe for success with his central character,
    based on a popular comic strip hero.

    "Yandim Ali is a great hero and heroism is something which always
    appeals to us ... Maybe we follow this path because we know the make-up
    of our people and know there is a majority that likes nationalist
    films," he told Reuters.

    In his film, Yandim Ali evolves from a loveable rogue to a hero of
    the country's liberation from foreign forces, inspired by the example
    of modern Turkey's founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

    But Dogan said it was important to guard against extreme nationalism
    in the cinema. Ultra-nationalists have been blamed in Turkey for
    a number of crimes, most recently the murder of prominent Turkish
    Armenian editor Hrant Dink in Istanbul.

    "I am against all excessive nationalism," Dogan said.

    ANTI-AMERICAN FEELING

    Dogan also had a hand in the creation of a television series which
    last year spawned Turkey's most successful film, the controversial
    "Valley of the Wolves-Iraq," whose hero Polat Alemdar single-handedly
    battles U.S. forces in Iraq.

    The Wolves film, with a record budget of $10 million, drew on
    anti-American sentiment in Turkey after a real-life incident in Iraq
    when U.S. forces arrested and hooded Turkish special forces, causing
    widespread anger and a diplomatic incident.

    "The subject was a matter of pride for Turkish people and was seen
    as a way of getting revenge ... It became clear that audiences could
    be attracted with such films. It has become something of a fashion,"
    said film critic Ugur Vardan.

    "Valley of the Wolves" is one of two Turkish films to draw a
    four-million-strong audience. It eclipsed the science-fiction comedy
    G.O.R.A., in which comedian Cem Yilmaz's character fights to escape
    the clutches of the aliens who abducted him.

    Alongside "The Last Ottoman," the other box-office success this
    year has been "The Masked Five in Iraq" in which a clumsy Turkish
    gang outwits U.S. forces in Iraq to divert oil resources from there
    to Turkey.

    Such mass-appeal films have in Turkey eclipsed the critical acclaim
    which some Turkish art house movies have earned abroad.

    One of the first major successes was Yilmaz Guney's "Yol" (Road)
    which won the Golden Palm at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival with its
    harsh portrayal of life after the 1980 coup.

    More recently, Nuri Bilge Ceylan's film "Uzak" (Far) won the Cannes
    Grand Jury and best actor awards in 2003 but drew a local audience
    of just 30,000, said film producer Mehmet Soyarslan.

    "This is not enough to keep the Turkish cinema industry on its feet.

    Unfortunately films like this do not attract audiences in Turkey,"
    he told Reuters at the offices of his company Ozen Film, one of
    Turkey's leading film companies.

    DECLINE AND REVIVAL

    He said critical success has had to take a back seat while the local
    film industry is developed to compete with bigger-budget foreign
    productions.

    Turkish cinema fell into decline in the mid-1970s with the spread
    of television. As a result, the number of cinema screens fell from
    several thousand to around just 250. By the time it began to recover
    in the late 1980s there were few producers and directors to make films,
    and few people willing to invest.

    Only in 1996 did cinema take a leap forward with the success of the
    film Eskiya, which drew an audience of more than 2.5 million people
    with its portrayal of the life of a bandit following his release from
    jail after a 35-year sentence.

    "The Turkish cinema's audience had been a sleeping giant and at
    that time it woke up. What was needed then was the food to feed it,"
    Soyarslan said.

    The number of locally made films has now doubled to around 30
    annually. Audiences of these films account for some 50 percent of
    box office receipts.

    The last decade has also seen the domestic film industry progressing
    technically and the next step is to achieve greater international
    success for local films.

    "Now we must try and open up internationally... I believe that Turkish
    cinema can now be compared with world cinema in terms of its technical
    standards and tempo," Soyarslan said.
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