Ay Lav Yu
- 2010
- 1 Std. 42 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,5/10
5488
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIbrahim returns to Tinne, along with his girlfriend, Jessica, but will the tiny village become their new home?Ibrahim returns to Tinne, along with his girlfriend, Jessica, but will the tiny village become their new home?Ibrahim returns to Tinne, along with his girlfriend, Jessica, but will the tiny village become their new home?
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 wins total
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Turkish actor and TV scriptwriter Sermiyan Midyat ("Polis" & "Pardon") re-teams with veteran comedy producer Sinan Çetin ("Pardon" & "Propaganda") for this fun little culture clash comedy which has had mixed critical reception and only moderate box-office success.
Recently graduated İbrahim (Sermiyan Midyat) returns to his family home in the officially unrecognised Kurdish village of Tinne in east Turkey with his American fiancée Jessica and her family in tow for the prerequisite cross-cultural confusion with political undertones.
Sermiyan Midyat makes for an amiable if somewhat hammy romantic comedy lead but struggles to generate any apparent chemistry with stilted sometime stunt woman and US TV bit-player Katie Gill ("Date Night" & "The Cellar") as his supposed love interest.
80s comedy superstar Steve Guttenberg ("Police Academy" & "Short Circuit") continues his non-come back at the head of a bizarre supporting cast which includes the ever radiant Mariel Hemingway and a brilliant comedy turn from veteran Turkish actor Meray Ülgen.
The debut director under the influence of a truly talented producer quickly seems to abandon the romantic comedy elements in favour of a more political satire which misses more targets than it scores but nonetheless provides enough light hearted laughs to be worth a viewing.
"Maybe you will ask, if nothing exists, why do you exist?"
Recently graduated İbrahim (Sermiyan Midyat) returns to his family home in the officially unrecognised Kurdish village of Tinne in east Turkey with his American fiancée Jessica and her family in tow for the prerequisite cross-cultural confusion with political undertones.
Sermiyan Midyat makes for an amiable if somewhat hammy romantic comedy lead but struggles to generate any apparent chemistry with stilted sometime stunt woman and US TV bit-player Katie Gill ("Date Night" & "The Cellar") as his supposed love interest.
80s comedy superstar Steve Guttenberg ("Police Academy" & "Short Circuit") continues his non-come back at the head of a bizarre supporting cast which includes the ever radiant Mariel Hemingway and a brilliant comedy turn from veteran Turkish actor Meray Ülgen.
The debut director under the influence of a truly talented producer quickly seems to abandon the romantic comedy elements in favour of a more political satire which misses more targets than it scores but nonetheless provides enough light hearted laughs to be worth a viewing.
"Maybe you will ask, if nothing exists, why do you exist?"
I'm learning Turkish so decided to watch this to help in that regard. It's tough learning a new language, but this is one way to do it.
Obviously, I understood the English dialogue and characters, and even understood the American girl when she spoke Turkish. It seems like a funny movie - cute, doesn't take itself seriously.
Just note that the Americans in the movie are portrayed as utter morons from the first shot to the last. In the very first scene with our bumbling idiots, the father (Steve Guttenberg) starts complaining his "navigator" (GPS) isn't working, his compass is out of focus (surely every American carries one of these when they travel abroad) he forgot his cellphone charger and that they are travelling with "a very weird priest" in a hearse in a god-forsaken country.
Sounds like every American I know. Professional complainers about 1st world problems while traveling abroad. That's sarcasm, in case you weren't certain.
First line out of the American woman's mouth - "Where can I get a diet Coke?"
Not one of the American circus save for the daughter speaks any Turkish, nor has bothered to learn even basic phrases. Merhaba, selam, iyi geceler - could go a long way with your Turkish friends should you visit but have no intent in learning their language.
I understand the need for exaggeration, but painting the foreigners as this willfully oblivious to their surroundings and the customs of Turkey is very much on the nose and silly. It almost feels like they are surprised to be in Turkey in the first place. And it doesn't stop there.
At one point, we are shown the unfortunate events of September 11th on a TV while they are visiting their new Turkish family. Guttenberg's character sees Osama bin Laden on the television, looks at the dede (grandfather) of his host family, looks back to bin Laden, back to dede... GASP, they look alike! WE ARE BEING KIDNAPPED!
Who wouldn't come to this conclusion?
This is like Hollywood or some mainstream news sources treating typecasting all Muslims as terrorists, but I digress.
In any case, I didn't take offense to this portrayal, I found it funny at points. it's a cute movie so far and I don't want to judge it solely upon how Americans are portrayed. It's a comedy, anyhow and probably has a lot of hidden gems.
Plus, I didn't understand much of the Turkish. I'll re-watch it in a year or two after I've acquired more of the language then adjust my star review accordingly.
Obviously, I understood the English dialogue and characters, and even understood the American girl when she spoke Turkish. It seems like a funny movie - cute, doesn't take itself seriously.
Just note that the Americans in the movie are portrayed as utter morons from the first shot to the last. In the very first scene with our bumbling idiots, the father (Steve Guttenberg) starts complaining his "navigator" (GPS) isn't working, his compass is out of focus (surely every American carries one of these when they travel abroad) he forgot his cellphone charger and that they are travelling with "a very weird priest" in a hearse in a god-forsaken country.
Sounds like every American I know. Professional complainers about 1st world problems while traveling abroad. That's sarcasm, in case you weren't certain.
First line out of the American woman's mouth - "Where can I get a diet Coke?"
Not one of the American circus save for the daughter speaks any Turkish, nor has bothered to learn even basic phrases. Merhaba, selam, iyi geceler - could go a long way with your Turkish friends should you visit but have no intent in learning their language.
I understand the need for exaggeration, but painting the foreigners as this willfully oblivious to their surroundings and the customs of Turkey is very much on the nose and silly. It almost feels like they are surprised to be in Turkey in the first place. And it doesn't stop there.
At one point, we are shown the unfortunate events of September 11th on a TV while they are visiting their new Turkish family. Guttenberg's character sees Osama bin Laden on the television, looks at the dede (grandfather) of his host family, looks back to bin Laden, back to dede... GASP, they look alike! WE ARE BEING KIDNAPPED!
Who wouldn't come to this conclusion?
This is like Hollywood or some mainstream news sources treating typecasting all Muslims as terrorists, but I digress.
In any case, I didn't take offense to this portrayal, I found it funny at points. it's a cute movie so far and I don't want to judge it solely upon how Americans are portrayed. It's a comedy, anyhow and probably has a lot of hidden gems.
Plus, I didn't understand much of the Turkish. I'll re-watch it in a year or two after I've acquired more of the language then adjust my star review accordingly.
I think, it's one of the funniest Turkish films.
I believe, the characters were very lovely and realistic.
So, I didn't like the movie very much.
Little boy pissed me off -_-
Little boy pissed me off -_-
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Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 1.422.457 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 42 Minuten
- Farbe
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