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I Saw the Sun

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Wikipedia article




'I Saw the Sun' is a 2009 Turkish drama film, written and directed by Mahsun Krmzgl, which tells of a Kurdish family who are forced from their village in southeastern Turkey by the conflict there. The film, which was released on , was one of the highest grossing Turkish films of 2009, prompting its re-release on . The film was Turkey's official submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 82nd Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.

Premise



The film tells of a Kurdish family who head to stanbul from their village in southeastern Turkey. Part of the family tries to emigrate to Norway.

Cast



* Mahsun Krmzgl - Ramo

* Cemal Tokta - Kadri

* Yldz Kltr - Pakize

* Sarp Apak - Ahmet

* Bura Glsoy - Berat

* Ali Srmeli - Nedim

* Altan Erkekli - Davut

* Erol Gnaydn - Samet

* Demet Evgar - Havar

* Cezmi Baskn - Bnyamin

* Murat nalm -

Production



Writer-director Mahsun Krmzgl has stated that the screenplay was inspired by the story of a man he met during the filming of his debut film 'The White Angel' , whose 21-member family had to abandon their village around 15 years previously. 'I was overwhelmed by what he told me. As I am a native of that region myself, I thought I would recount the story in the way it deserves. I hope everyone gets the right message from the film,' Krmzgl said. 'Those who watch this film will see that nothing can be solved through hatred. My aim is to stop the bloodshed by boosting Turkish-Kurdish fellowship. This film will delve more strongly into the concepts of brotherhood and unity. We have to love each other without prejudice because nothing can be solved with hatred.'

Veteran screen actor Cezmi Baskn, who has a minor role in the film, stated 'Mahsun has a rising momentum in Turkish cinema. He is a professional and his communication with the actors was excellent. I believe he filmed the story he wanted to tell in the best way he could.'

Release



Premiere

The film premiered at a special gala screening at the AFM stinye Park Cinema in Istanbul on at which, according to writer-director Mahsun Krmzgl, the audience reflected the emotion in the film.

A second special gala screening was held at Panora Cinema in Ankara on attended by a number of high-profile guests, including Turkish State Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Cemil iek, who said the film 'aptly portrays the pain and anguish Turkey has suffered in the last 25 years' and 'includes some very accurate messages,' and Turkish Culture and Tourism Minister Erturul Gnay, who said the 'very bold and realistic' film showed 'Turkey's wounds in all its reality and proposed big steps to be taken to heal those wounds.'

At the film's premiere in Istanbul Krmzgl said, 'I hope the message of our film reaches the public as quickly as possible,' at the following screening in Ankara he said, 'Message transmitted.'

General release

The film opened on nationwide general release in 355 screens across Turkey on at number one in the Turkish box-office with a first weekend gross of US$2,539,362. The film was re-released in 31 screens across Turkey on with little success.

Festival screenings

* 22nd Tokyo International Film Festival (1725 October 2009)

* 33rd Cairo International Film Festival (1020 November 2009)

* 40th International Film Festival of India (28 November - 3 December 2009)

Reception



Box office

The film was at number one in the Turkish box office charts for 5 weeks of its 11-week run and was the third highest-grossing Turkish film of 2009 with a total gross of US$12,812,281.

Reviews

'[The film] is illustrated as an ambitious melodramatic epic through its many subplots and ensemble cast,' according to 'Today's Zaman' reviewer Ermine Yldrm, 'which actually works in achieving its goal of spreading a thing or two about humanity and unconditional fraternity, even though there's ample force-feeding through its languorous monologues of micro-politics.' 'Nevertheless, Krmzgl's message cannot go unnoticed as he continually underlines the importance of different segments of society living in harmony and the ideal that the state is not a divider but a caregiver.' 'Krmzgl might not be a great filmmaker,' Yldrm concludes, 'but he is on his way to becoming a true philanthropist.'

Awards

* 22nd Tokyo International Film Festival (25 October 2009) - Asian Film Award (Special Mention)

* 3rd Yeilam Awards (23 March 2010) - Best Supporting Actor: Cemal Tokta (Won)

See also



* 2009 in film

* Turkish films of 2009

References




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