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Uzak

  • 2002
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 50min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.5/10
24 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Uzak (2002)
Ver DISTANT (Uzak) - Official U.S. trailer
Reproducir trailer1:35
1 video
87 fotos
ComedyDrama

Después de que su esposa lo abandona, un fotógrafo sufre una crisis existencial e intenta sobrellevar la visita de su prima.Después de que su esposa lo abandona, un fotógrafo sufre una crisis existencial e intenta sobrellevar la visita de su prima.Después de que su esposa lo abandona, un fotógrafo sufre una crisis existencial e intenta sobrellevar la visita de su prima.

  • Dirección
    • Nuri Bilge Ceylan
  • Guionista
    • Nuri Bilge Ceylan
  • Elenco
    • Muzaffer Özdemir
    • Mehmet Emin Toprak
    • Zuhal Gencer
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.5/10
    24 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Nuri Bilge Ceylan
    • Guionista
      • Nuri Bilge Ceylan
    • Elenco
      • Muzaffer Özdemir
      • Mehmet Emin Toprak
      • Zuhal Gencer
    • 83Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 34Opiniones de los críticos
    • 84Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 31 premios ganados y 8 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    DISTANT (Uzak) - Official U.S. trailer
    Trailer 1:35
    DISTANT (Uzak) - Official U.S. trailer

    Fotos87

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
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    + 80
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    Elenco principal20

    Editar
    Muzaffer Özdemir
    Muzaffer Özdemir
    • Mahmut
    Mehmet Emin Toprak
    Mehmet Emin Toprak
    • Yusuf
    Zuhal Gencer
    • Nazan
    • (as Zuhal Gencer Erkaya)
    Nazan Kesal
    • Lover
    • (as Nazan Kirilmis)
    Feridun Koç
    • Janitor
    Fatma Ceylan
    • Mother
    Ebru Ceylan
    Ebru Ceylan
      Bahaltin Surler
        Nazli Aydin
        Engin Hepsev
        Ercan Kesal
        Ercan Kesal
        Asli Orhun
        Ahmet Bugay
        Arif Asçi
        Cemal Gülas
        Ahmet Özyurt
        Erhan Ersoy
        Hakan Kuldan
        • Dirección
          • Nuri Bilge Ceylan
        • Guionista
          • Nuri Bilge Ceylan
        • Todo el elenco y el equipo
        • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

        Opiniones de usuarios83

        7.523.9K
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        Opiniones destacadas

        10cine_rama

        Outstanding film with a lot to say, not just about modern Turkey

        It's probably a year since I saw Uzak, but it has left strong memories of the two main characters, jaded photographer Mahmut and his naive cousin from the village Yusuf.

        It's a long film with very little dialogue and a quite limited plot. This has evidently annoyed a fair few viewers. But the film constructs such a painfully believable portrait of Mahmut and Yusuf that there's just as much emotional tension as in the paciest thriller.

        Just to be clear, there's no padding in this film -- in the long pauses where no one speaks there as much happening in the characters' emotions (and in yours, watching them) as you could bear. Go to see it awake and alert, and you'll be gripped rather than anaesthetised.

        Uzak rings true in so many ways, and that sincerity is probably its greatest accomplishment. People don't grapple with events and problems, so much as with each other. In fact, in the whole film, there's probably not one point where the main characters (Mahmut, Yusuf and Mahmut's ex-wife Nazan) are not opposed.

        Much of it is true the world over: country cousin Yusuf's perhaps wilfully naive expectation that a job on a ship will drop into his lap; Mahmut's urbanised cynicism and unwillingness to sympathise with Yusuf.

        Other truths are more-specific to Turkey: Yusuf's incomprehension that Mahmut might be tolerating his stay with gritted teeth; Yusuf veering between macho ambition and wide-eyed awkwardness when he tries to get to know a woman.

        Uzak is undoubtedly a pretty bleak film, and one Ceylan's strengths is not to beat us over the head with the themes he explores. For me at least, I believed entirely in the behaviour of his characters. All the little failed attempts to connect and petty cruelties ring so true. And yet I didn't leave with a message that "The world is like that", but instead I got "This is how we sometimes treat each other."
        10kelly-cooper

        Captures the spirit of Chekhov better than any other film.

        Hysterically painful; perhaps the kind of movie Chekhov would have made had he made movies. What's really funny is that the two cousins have so very much in common (many descriptions of their relationship on this site are dead wrong).

        What's really funny and uncomfortable about these characters is that they just can't bring themselves to talk to each other - or anyone else! It's horrible. If you've ever been too shy, worried, self-involved, or just plain scared to talk to someone (and who hasn't?) you'll definitely see yourself in this film. And it won't be pretty.

        It holds a mirror up to the audience and says, "If you don't like what you see... change it".
        Volkan_U

        Uzak is a contemporary masterpiece

        Distant is the story of two alienated people and their intercrossed lives that end up illustrating something about the fate of mankind in a downsizing world. The basic premise is that of a country bumpkin, Yusuf, with whose arrival at his cousin Mahmut's house begins a dance of discomfiture between the two men who have become distanced from their inner selves each in a separate way. Yusuf's removal from his feeding grounds is not enough to cast a pall over his mood, but his naïve, insecure optimism is quick to turn him into a permanent cripple in the frigid atmosphere of Istanbul when it is denied all nourishment from Mahmut whose sophistication is a casebook recipe for alienation. Mahmut is a photographer who has labored hard to make it in the big city and by Yusuf's arrival completely turned himself over to his profession.

        The women in Mahmut's life are transits, too, in one way or another: his ex-wife, now married again, has come to terms with the fact that she was left infertile by an abortion, which still vexes Mahmut's conscience, and now she and her new husband have decided to move to a new country, possibly never to return. His mother is ill and dying, but Mahmut puts off going to see her in the hospital until three quarters into the movie when a surgery has left her wailing with pain and bemoaning her fate like almost every other character in this picture. The motif of ailing mothers is one of the crucial ties between the cousins, for Yusuf has one too. In contrast to Mahmut's neglectful attitude, the very first thing Yusuf does in Istanbul is to call his own mother. Nonetheless, neither man may hope to effect much change in the women from whom they are separated by physical or emotional distance. Not only can they relate to the relationships in their lives, but also neither man can form a new relationship throughout the movie, with Yusuf experiencing repeated rejections from one employer after another and both men never mustering the courage to formalize a relationship with the attractive women who pass through their lives. Both transits, the cousins find that their lives are peopled by the relationships of most transitory kind.

        Like a symphony, the film plays around with the various meanings of its title in a virtuoso directorial performance by NB Ceylan, who has made a career out of enshrining Tarkovsky into the landscape of Turkish cinema. The influence of Tarkovsky here is felt not only in Mahmut's private screenings of Solaris, and the movie's decidedly meticulous cinematography, but also in the mysterious deployment of free indirect imagery (imagery of a character's thoughts), and a mystical signpost at the end of the movie that recalls Tarkovsky's Nostalghia. Interestingly, Distant won three Palme D'Ors at the Cannes film festival, where it was judged by no other than Steven Soderberg who has remade Solaris, that seminal masterpiece of Tarkovsky.

        Unlike Tarkovsky and even Soderberg, however, Ceylan ends his film at a note that is nonetheless captivating for having been obvious for a very long time. The cousins drive each other to the brink and finally, disillusioned, Yusuf moves out and disappears from Mahmut's life. The story unfolds like a classic parable with readily identifiable and human elements that offset its "alien" features, such as its Turkish setting, and makes this film a universal and poignant tale of lives held at a devastating distance.
        8tomgillespie2002

        Fantastic commentary on social and emotional distance

        Mahmut (Muzaffer Ozdemir) is a successful photographer living in his middle-class apartment in Istanbul. His wife has recently left him, and he is suffering from feelings of isolation and loneliness. Mahmut's cousin Yusuf (Emin Toprak) loses his factory job (along with possibly 1000 others in his hometown) and travels to Istanbul to find work on the ships, where he hears the money is plentiful and easy. Yusuf moves in with Mahmut, and the social and emotional distance between the two is immediately apparent. As time goes by, Yusuf struggles to find work and desperately searches for love (or sex) to no avail, while Mahmut becomes increasingly frustrated with Yusuf's slobbish attitudes and lethargic attitude.

        Director Nuri Bilge Ceylan's background is in photography, leading to a natural progression into films. His eye for photographic beauty is evident as Uzak is often astonishing in it's framing and colour saturation. Istanbul is shot with an aura of misery, and these two lonely souls gaze out to the grey sea with the rain and drizzle falling upon their slumped shoulders. However, amongst the greys and the browns, Uzak proves to be an extremely funny film, with Ceylan drawing humour from the most mundane of everyday occurrences. I found the most subtly funny scene is where Mahmut and Yusuf watch Tarkovsky's Stalker (1979), with Yusuf getting bored at what looks like around the twenty minute point. Yusuf leaves, and Mahmut quickly puts a porn video in. Yusuf re- enters causing Mahmut to quickly turn the channel over, only for Yusuf to linger over his shoulder mindlessly staring at the TV. It brilliantly captures the increasing tension between the two, while laughing at their ridiculous situation.

        The title Uzak translates at Distant, referring to the social, emotional and spiritual distance between the two, but it also refers to the global distance that is appearing in society as the world gets smaller. Communication is easier yet harder. Although Mahmut and Yusuf are physically and geographically together, they are miles apart. Mahmut is sophisticated and clean (or at least he likes to think of himself like this and models himself on Tarkovsky, but as the aforementioned scene proves, he'd much rather watch a bit of porn) and Yusuf is uneducated and messy. Mahmut has sacrificed personal happiness to live out his idyllic middle-class lifestyle, and Yusuf lazes around expecting a job and money to come to him, leading him to live out his miserable, sexually inactive life. Uzak is occasionally grim and contains little dialogue, but Ceylan's amazing eye for humour and social commentary make it a wonderful experience. And special mention must go to the two leads, who are brilliant in their roles, making it all the more tragic that Emin Toprak was killed shortly after the filming was complete.

        www.the-wrath-of-blog.blogspot.com
        8DAW-8

        very good

        Reading some of the other reviews of this film, i was reminded of both good and not so good aspects of it. But overall, i have to say it is one of the better films i have seen from any number of genres or countries recently. More than anything else, it avoided many of the typical traps of more recent international cinema, like taking nice pictures of landscapes or being 'hip', 'fun' or imitating American films like pulp fiction. The film is unique in many ways. For one thing, it is a film about relationships in which sex plays no role (unusual, especially for foreign films). It is also a film about two men's relationship to each other (also unusual - not a 'buddy film', no homosexual tension, no ego/phallic competition). It uses little dialogue, but communicates a tremendous amount. It is a simple story, yet full of complex details which are easily understood by any human being and universal in their relevance. I did not find the film dark or depressing (everything would seem this way if you watch Hollywood happy ending films all the time), but rather a true reflection of human emotions. For instance, in the scene where Mahmut realizes his cousin is gone is you see both his feeling of relief, that the cousin is gone and yet regret, that he pushed him away. Who has not felt such ambivalence - when losing a friend or lover, or in some other situation? It's rare to get these kinds of real human emotions displayed on film in a non-cliché way. As far as culture is concerned, or this being a Turkish film, i feel it strikes the very difficult balance between being a 'Turkish' film - about realities which more apply to that place (the greater struggle to make it in a Turkish city versus a European one; the greater contrast between country and city), and a universal, human story which didn't necessarily have to be set in Turkey. In this day and age where people around the world are consuming culture and fetishizing it, this film does not try to entice us as 'Turkish', nor does it try to communicate it as a 'harsh reality', or 'that's how Turkey/Istanbul IS'. And yet the cultural elements are there. I think the comparison to 'lost in translation' that somebody made is quite good. Everyone, at least in the US, was raving about that film. I personally thought it was mediocre at best. It was well put by someone as a vague story which supposedly was supposed to deal with 'disorientation' that happens to people living or traveling overseas. Even if the film was supposed to be humorous, the characters and their motivations or crises were never clear (even for a 'lighter' film or comedy, this is necessary). And i found myself being treated to a typically 'orientalist' story of the alienated Amerian overseas. Going back to 'Distant', as for the idea that this is bad acting, or too slow, or has no plot, I'm sorry but people who say this know nothing about film making and maybe nothing about being human, no offense. You do not have to be a film aficionado or cultural connoisseur to appreciate this film. This film will be two hours of your time well spent!

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        Argumento

        Editar

        ¿Sabías que…?

        Editar
        • Trivia
          Mahmut's house is actually the director's own house.
        • Conexiones
          Features El espejo (1975)
        • Bandas sonoras
          Zaman
          (uncredited)

          Written by Kiraç

          Performed by Kiraç

          [Played during the Yusuf was following the girl at the music store]

        Selecciones populares

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        Preguntas Frecuentes18

        • How long is Distant?Con tecnología de Alexa

        Detalles

        Editar
        • Fecha de lanzamiento
          • 20 de diciembre de 2002 (Turquía)
        • País de origen
          • Turquía
        • Sitio oficial
          • NBC film
        • Idioma
          • Turco
        • También se conoce como
          • Distant
        • Locaciones de filmación
          • Estambul, Turquía
        • Productora
          • NBC Film
        • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

        Taquilla

        Editar
        • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
          • USD 106,622
        • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
          • USD 11,280
          • 14 mar 2004
        • Total a nivel mundial
          • USD 767,337
        Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

        Especificaciones técnicas

        Editar
        • Tiempo de ejecución
          1 hora 50 minutos
        • Color
          • Color
        • Mezcla de sonido
          • Dolby Digital
        • Relación de aspecto
          • 1.85 : 1

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