Inan Temelkuran Turkish filmmaker Inan Temelkuran was born in Izmir in 1976. He studied film making in Spain after he recieved his degree in law in Ankara. He is the director, writer and producer of the award-winning films Made in Europe and Bornova Bornova, both of which are part of TurkishFilmChannel catalog.

We recently sat down with him in Istanbul and talked about many things over the course of an hour. This is Part 1 of our interview.

Interview with Inan Temelkuran

TurkishFilmChannel: You studied law, and then you moved to Spain and became a filmmaker. Can you tell us about the process?

Inan Temelkuran: I always wanted to be a filmmaker, since I was 13. There were only 3 film schools and not enough jobs for graduates.  And my parents wanted me to study a “real major” first, and then do whatever I wanted. My father is a lawyer so I studied law. After graduating from law school in Ankara, I moved to Spain on a research scholarship to study “Franco era popular Spanish films”. After 9 months, I came back to Turkey and moved back to Spain this time to study filmmaking in TAI film school (Workshop of Scenery Arts). It is the first film school of Spain and professors were quite famous. That’s where I studied film making.

TFC: What was the impact of studying filmmaking in Spain?

IT: Where you live affects even the way you would take a picture of your friend. One should take care of photography in a way that it adds to the story, not just to make it beautiful. Also, the discipline in TAI school meant we had to find ways to make films with zero-budget. So you had to be creative, fast and organized. Professors had their own esthetic way of seeing the world. And that leaves a stigma on you.

TFC: How could you make a film with zero-budget?

IT: With volunteers. If you get a camera from a friend, sound equipment from another friend, and find actors, you are practically done. These are the three basic things. You can make a movie as long as you have actors, camera and sound equipment.

If you want to make a believable movie, you need to create place and time. So you find the most representative place and show it in a way that it creates a space. For example, if I show thrown-away pants on a chair, with a dirty picture on the wall, dirty floor and sound from a squeaky bed those will give you the impression of a hooker and a man. I just showed four items, and it created the time and the space. You don’t need a lot of money to do that. You need to take it in an intelligent way. And find most representative things of what you want to tell according to the feeling you want to pass to the audience.

TFC: How did you make Made in Europe with zero-budget in 4 different locations?

IT: I had friends in all cities and they helped me. Getting help from volunteers and friends, staying at cheap places, using cheap things were the keys. I wasn’t paying the actors. They wanted to join because they wanted to become part of an interesting movie. And their bonus was travelling to those cities.

Still it required some money because of transportation. I made educational videos for big companies to make enough money to buy plane tickets and food for the actors, and some necessary spending such renting a location when I had to.

[to be continued...]

You’d salt the meat when it stinks… what if the salt stinks?

In the midst of a night, an unexpected ferryboat approaches to the shores of a cute little town. On the deck, an inspector and his assistant – two highly commissioned authorities only assigned to very fragile cases concerning the government, scan the town from a distance.

Murky Waters, is the director’s first long feature. Turkish filmmaker Dersu Yavuz Altun, who has been awarded many times for his short features, attempts a rather non-exploited cinema style in Turkey, Film Noir; and tries to establish his feature in this kind of a cinematographic language. The director of photography is the famous İlker Berke, who has also worked in “Boats out of Watermelon Rinds”. The music of the film is created by Tolga Burkay, who has very quietly and unobtrusively created his own language in Turkish film industry. The leading roles are Ali Erkazan, İdil Fırat and Mahir İpek.

Feature’s main emotion is the individual’s historical stranded-ness who has long lost his chance to decide upon his own life and future. Structuring a universal story with its roots in our own social reality, the film sits tight at the center of a frame that aims to visualize and make visible the sickening emotional atmosphere of today’s corrupted world.

You can find more information about our latest addition here. As TurkishFilmChannel we are going to do our best to make it available online on our partner channels as soon as possible!

Türkiye’de film sektörünün en büyük problemlerinden birisi “korsan”. Filmler DVD olarak piyasaya çıkar çıkmaz hatta bazen çıkmadan önce korsan film sitelerine düşmekte. Korsan siteler para kazanma peşindeler ve tek para kaynakları da reklamlar. Eğer bu reklamlar “Tebrikler bir milyonuncu ziyaretçi olarak nefis bir tatil kazandınız“,  ”Burnunuz büyük kulağınız da küçük olsun istiyorsanız ürünümüzü kullanın” , “Nijeryalı prense yardım edin para kazanın” tadındaki reklamlar olsaydı tencere yuvarlanmış kapağını bulmuş diye düşünmek mümkün olabilirdi. Fakat inanılması güç te olsa kimi büyük markalar bu sitelere reklam vermekte bir sakınca görmüyorlar. Sitelerine ziyaretçi geldiği sürece kime para kazandırdıklarını umursamıyorlar. Oysa ortada bir hırsızlık var. Üreten insanların emeklerinin çalınması ve geçim kaynaklarının, bir sonraki filmlerine katkıda bulunabilecek paranın kaybı söz konusu.

 

gittigidiyor ve trendyol korsan destekliyor

gittigidiyor ve trendyol korsan destekliyor

 

Eklenmesi gereken absürd bir not kimi korsan sitelerin seyircilerinden emeklerine saygı gösterilmesini istemeleri. Kim kimin emeğine saygı göstermiyor sizce?

TurkishFilmChannel olarak Türk filmlerinin Internet üzerinde yasal dağıtımını yapıyoruz. Yayıncı şirketlerimizden biri olan MUBI ile ortak yürüttüğümüz kampanya dahilinde filmlerimizden birini promosyon kodumuzu kullanarak bedava seyredebilirsiniz. Böylelikle MUBI’nin nasıl çalıştığını deneme fırsatı da bulmuş olacaksınız. Detaylar için lütfen kampanya sayfamıza bakın.

Filmlerin hangi ülkelerde yayınlanabileceği lisans sözleşmeleri ile belirleniyor. Bu yüzden yaşadığınız ülkede bütün filmlerimizi seyredemeyebilirsiniz ama kısıtlı olabilecek seçeneklere rağmen hoşunuza gidecek, merak ettiğiniz filmler bulacağınıza eminiz. Hemen ekleyelim, kataloğumuza yeni film katmak ve bütün ülkeler için yayın haklarını almak konusunda sürekli çalışıyoruz.

İyi eğlenceler!

 

 IndieFlix is now offering TurkishFilmChannel films as part of their extensive independent film collection. We believe this will be a great opportunity to reach independent film lovers and enable them to discover independent award-winning Turkish films.

In 2005 IndieFlix launched with 36 titles, today they are offering over 2500 award-winning films for purchase, rental or streaming.

By the way IndieFlix has a 3-day trial membership in case you are not a member already and you want to give their services a try. After the trial you can continue with their $7.95 per month plan and have unlimited access to IndieFlix library. You can see our films on IndieFlix website on our page.

Enjoy!

Our catalog is growing. Today, we are proud to announce the addition of Fikret Bey directed by Selma Koksal to our catalog. We will make it available online on our partner channels soon and keep you posted.

Fikret Bey directed by Selma Koksal

Fikret Bey (Mr Fikret) is about the story of a day of a businessman, Fikret Özsoy, who has had a long life with many ups and downs. The routine of that day, the 13th of October, 1988, is the story of decline, a finale, a demise. As Fikret Bey has witnessed the deterioration of many values he had believed in, we are presented with the recent history of Turkey through him and people around him.

“Those who sing revolutionary songs when everything is quiet prefer to hide behind doors when things get difficult.” Yilmaz Guney.

“The critic J. Hoberman once described the Turkish filmmaker Yilmaz Guney as ‘something like Clint Eastwood, James Dean, and Che Guevara combined’, and for anyone familiar with the particulars of his career, it is sometimes astonishing that this roughneck-star-auteur ever actually existed.” Bilge Ebiri, Senses of Cinema, 2005

One of our special collections is dedicated to this great master: Films of Yilmaz Guney. You can watch his films on Amazon InstantVideoMUBI, IndieFlix and decide if Mr Hoberman was right. Enjoy!

 

Yilmaz Guney Films in TurkishFilmChannel catalog

 

As part of Cannes 2011, MUBI is collaborating with La Semaine de la Critique (Critics’ Week), which is celebrating its 50th anniversary. The collaboration includes free viewing of films, which were recognized in Critics’ Week throughout its history. For details of this program you can check out their announcement http://mubi.com/programs/la-semaine-de-la-critique

 

Gemide (On Board) by Serdar Akar

We are proud to announce that one of our films Gemide (On Board) directed by Serdar Akar is part of this program, and you can watch it for free until end of June 2011 (first 1000 views are free).

A sequel to “Lalelide Bir Azize”, and with the collaboration of practically the same team, Gemide is a story of four sailors who co-exist in a silt-cleaning ship, living a very routine existence, enlivened only by the tales spun by their captain. One evening one of the sailors arrives back from the harbor badly beaten and robbed. The others track down the culprits but accidentally kill one of them; to add to their problems, they have also kidnapped a prostitute, keeping her in the hold overnight. The next morning they realize what trouble they have got themselves into, and what they will have to do to extricate themselves from it.

 

Don’t miss this opportunity to watch this great film and others which are part of this program. Here is the link for Gemide (On Board) on MUBI website.

Gemide (On Board) by Serdar Akar

A scene from Gemide (On Board)

Enjoy!

We are proud to announce the addition of two brilliant films to our catalog. Bunu Gercekten Yapmali miyim? (Should I Really Do It?) by Ismail Necmi, and Havar by Mehmet Guleryuz are now part of our catalog. We will do our best to get these films available online soon on our partner channels.

Bunu Gercekten Yapmali Miyim? (Should I Really Do It?)

This real-life-feature follows the extraordinary life of PETRA, a German woman living in Istanbul, in an ironic inversion of the Turkish migrant to Germany. Her life will take such strange turns you will think she is following a script. But really, we are watching a real life protagonist evolve in the face of life. For, ultimately, nothing is ever as surprising as life. Except, perhaps, fiction! During ‘sessions’ with the mysterious, masked HEROLD, her life unfolds before our eyes and we will learn about everything: Istanbul, Germany, family, friends, drugs, and death. “Should I Really Do It?” plays with these concepts of real life and fiction, documentary, and drama… Could life ever be more interesting than fiction?

Havar

Director Mehmet Guleryuz tells a story about honor killings taking place in Southeastern Turkey in this drama with all amateur actors. Sehmus goes mad when he hears rumors about his to-be-bride Havar getting close with a guy from a neighboring village. He asks Havar’s father to punish her with death.

As a filmmaker, what attracts me most in human nature is its dark side.“ Zeki Demirkubuz

We recently introduced special collections of our films, and one of them is really special for us: Zeki Demirkubuz films. In 2006 Fiachra Gibbons of Guardian described him as “Zeki Demirkubuz is one of the utterly unclassifiable talents Turkish cinema has quietly produced to surprise, delight and challenge the world. He seems surprised that his serious films have struck such an international chord. Yet he is one of a select club of directors to have had two films competing at Cannes at the same time [Fate (2001) and Confession (2002)]…”

Zeki Demirkubuz Films in TurkishFilmChannel catalog

  

In 2007 Film Society of Lincoln Center hosted a retrospective of Zeki Demirkubuz films titled “Mental Minefields: The Dark Tales of Zeki Demirkubuz“. He was described as a revolutionist of Turkish cinema: ”Together with a handful of others, Demirkubuz has been leading a revolution in Turkish cinema for the past decade…. His protagonists all have astonishingly rich, varied and at times frightening personal psychologies, yet one never feels that their inner worlds are completely divorced from the external circumstances of their lives – or even their experiences in reality.

If you want to discover this great director, you can follow the retrospective MUBI launched: “Chasing Shadows: The Films of Zeki Demirkubuz”, which will last one full year. Enjoy!