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Sabtu, 07 Januari 2012

Resensi Film: Kurtlar Vadisi - Filistin

Valley of the Wolves: Palestine (Turkish: Kurtlar Vadisi: Filistin) is a Turkish action film, directed by Zübeyr Şaşmaz, about a Turkish commando team which go to Palestine to track down the Israeli military commander responsible for the Gaza flotilla raid. The film, which went on nationwide general release across Turkey on 28 January 2011, is one of the most expensive Turkish films ever made. It is part of the Valley of the Wolves media franchise, based on the Turkish television series of the same name, and is a sequel to Valley of the Wolves: Iraq (2006) and Valley of the Wolves: Gladio (2008). The film caused some controversy: some German film critics accused the film of being antisemitic.






Production

Pana Film had already settled on the Palestinian territories as the setting of the film and was about to start shooting when the May 31, 2010 Gaza flotilla raid occurred. The existing script was subsequently rewritten to feature the raid as the centre piece of the plot. "This is not about taking revenge for Mavi Marmara," stated producer Zübeyr Şaşmaz, "The goal of the film is to show what the Palestinians are going through." Screenwriter Bahadır Özdener added, "We're calling out to people's conscience. All we want is freedom for innocent and tormented Palestinian people living in inhumane conditions in the world's biggest prison."
The film, which is projected to cost over $20 million, making it one of the most expensive Turkish films, was shot in 11 weeks on location in Adana and Tarsus (Turkey) with a team of 400 people during the summer of 2010. Officials from Pana Film said that these locations were chosen, after scouting several locations in Lebanon, Syria and Bulgaria as well as 20 provinces in Turkey, including Hatay, Elazığ, Şanlıurfa and Gaziantep, due to, "the historical texture, the streets and local culture of these places." According to Bünyamın Köselı, writing in Today's Zaman, "approximately 3,000 fans were drawn to the Şehit Kerim neighborhood in Tarsus, where some of the scenes were shot", "which makes the salesmen in the city very happy". Extensive re-shoots were later required after some of the film's action sequences were burned during the lab process.


Plot

After the flotilla attempts to bring humanitarian assistance to Gaza refuses to turn back, it is attacked by the Israeli military. In a dramatic battle scene, activists resist and are mowed down by the Israeli soldiers. A Turkish commando team led by Polat Alemdar (Necati Şaşmaz) travels to West Bank in Palestine, where they launch a campaign against Israeli military personnel in an attempt to track down and eliminate an Israeli general, leader Moşe Ben Eliyezer (Erdal Beşikçioğlu) responsible for the flotilla raid.


Cast

  • Necati Şaşmaz as Polat Alemdar
  • Erdal Beşikçioğlu as Moşe Ben Eliyezer
  • Nur Aysan as Simone
  • Gürkan Uygun as Memati Baş
  • Kenan Çoban as Abdülhey Çoban
  • Erkan Sever
  • Zafer Diper
  • Umut Karadağ
  • Mustafa Yaşar


Release

The announcement of the film's release came just days after Israel's attack on the Gaza flotilla and according to Emrah Güler, writing in Hürriyet Daily Newsthe name of the movie was enough for millions to buy tickets. Technical problems however resulted in the release of the film being postponed until 28 January 2011.
The film was premiered at a special gala screening on 26 January 2011 and a press screening on 27 January 2011 at Nişantaşı City's Shopping Mall in Istanbul, where director Zübeyr Şaşmaz defended his film against criticism like that the film would earn money by exploiting Palestine and Islamic feelings.
Many commenters criticised the action to be too artificial. Mostly they refer to two scenes, where the protagonist responds to an Israeli officer asking for the reason to come to Israel: "I didn't come to Israel, I came to Palestine", and where the protagonist assures the main antagonist of the film Moshe, a military commander responsible for the Gaza flotilla raid, that he will have his 'promised land' only 'six feet under'.
The film finally received an 18 certificate from the FSK in Germany because of their initial concerns over the film's perceived anti-Israeli and anti-American overtones and its scheduled release on 27 January 2011 (International Holocaust Remembrance Day) which caused some controversy about it being antisemitic propaganda. Jewish organisations and politicians of Turkish descent opposed the film and some tried to ban it.
The film opened on nationwide general release in 364 screens across Turkey on 28 January 2011 at number 1 in the national box office with a first weekend gross of US$3,830,431.

Sorry kalo pake bahasa Inggris, ini copas dari wikipedia ;p







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