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7,6/10
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MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA homeless man named Mahsun survives in Istanbul's Rumelihisari by stealing cars at night and returning them clean.A homeless man named Mahsun survives in Istanbul's Rumelihisari by stealing cars at night and returning them clean.A homeless man named Mahsun survives in Istanbul's Rumelihisari by stealing cars at night and returning them clean.
- Récompenses
- 17 victoires et 4 nominations au total
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The movie have been shooted for 4 hours with borrowed movie camera in 24 days. The crew sticked together. So, this is a low budget movie. I found technical specifications (such as shots, sounds, synchronization) little bad by year. If you like oriental songs, you will lose yourself with "Yansimalar" and "Baba Zula"s music in this movie. The subject is the life story of someone on the street. We can really see how it is. So realistic. But some frames are greenly, nonsensical, absurd. The movie received awards at several international film festivals including the Golden Orange for best film. This is a cult film. And it deserves.
This is a tale of "The Insulted and Humiliated".
Mahsun (Ahmet Ugurlu) is a homeless man, gentle as he can be, addicted to auto burglary (not for joyriding but for staying alive in freezing Istanbul nights.) and trying to make sense of it all. He makes friends with a heroin addict and a peacock, yes a peacock he stole from the historic Rumelihisari (a historical fortress) and things get complicated and messy. Ahmet Ugurlu plays flawlessly as if he is the real Mahsun. Director makes you witness surreal moments around the fortress and the sea.
With enchanting musics by "Baba Zula" and "Yansimalar" and pristine views from Istanbul city, Somersault in a Coffin takes you on a journey to the life of backstreet people.
If you wanna join their night journey, here's your pick!
Mahsun (Ahmet Ugurlu) is a homeless man, gentle as he can be, addicted to auto burglary (not for joyriding but for staying alive in freezing Istanbul nights.) and trying to make sense of it all. He makes friends with a heroin addict and a peacock, yes a peacock he stole from the historic Rumelihisari (a historical fortress) and things get complicated and messy. Ahmet Ugurlu plays flawlessly as if he is the real Mahsun. Director makes you witness surreal moments around the fortress and the sea.
With enchanting musics by "Baba Zula" and "Yansimalar" and pristine views from Istanbul city, Somersault in a Coffin takes you on a journey to the life of backstreet people.
If you wanna join their night journey, here's your pick!
Turkish Cypriot Director Dervis Zaim made this movie with only a little money, three main players and a few theatre players. It became a new masterpiece after its premiere in 1996. It won 20 awards in Turkey and Out Of Turkey in the countries Canada USA England Germany and also Italy. With its beautiful music, widescreen presentation and also the unforgettable ending, it is the masterpiece of our Cypriot director. Also its DVD is great and there's available english, german and french subtitles. Beautiful unforgettable movie.
Shot on a minimal budget around the streets of İstanbul, TABUTTA RÖVAŞATA focuses on the life of Mahsun (Ahmet Uğurlu), a down-and- out living on the edge of the Bosphorus. He ekes out an existence living under bridges, and subsequently as a bathroom attendant, offering eau de cologne to the customers. He encounters a drug- addict girl (Ayşen Aydemir), with whom he dreams of traveling away in a boat; but nothing comes of it. In the end he ends up in the Rümeli Fortress, where he steals a peacock and cooks it over an open fire.
Derviş Zaim's debut feature makes some trenchant points about the way society treats its lowest members. Mahsun is regularly beaten up by the police, or forced to do errands for the local criminal classes in order to survive. At a heart a good-willing person, trying to help the girl, his efforts at kindness come to naught.
Zaim contrasts this worldly indifference with more enduring elements; there are regular shots of the Bosphorus, suggesting its timelessness. The use of the peacock in Rümeli likewise suggests the timeless theme; they have strutted around the castle battlements for centuries, and will continue to do so. By stealing the peacock Mahsun hopes to associate himself with that timelessness, as an alternative to the exigencies of the present; but hunger eventually gets the better of him, and he is forced to eat it.
TABUTTA RÖVAŞATA introduces several of the motifs characteristic of Zaim's later work - the emphasis on the power of water to transcend merely human affairs, regular shots of a graveyard that once again emphasize the timeless theme - where past, present and future collide - and the regular shots of the protagonists standing by the water's edge, prompting us to reflect on the human condition. This is not just an indictment of contemporary Turkish life: Zaim wants us to reflect on all human life.
Derviş Zaim's debut feature makes some trenchant points about the way society treats its lowest members. Mahsun is regularly beaten up by the police, or forced to do errands for the local criminal classes in order to survive. At a heart a good-willing person, trying to help the girl, his efforts at kindness come to naught.
Zaim contrasts this worldly indifference with more enduring elements; there are regular shots of the Bosphorus, suggesting its timelessness. The use of the peacock in Rümeli likewise suggests the timeless theme; they have strutted around the castle battlements for centuries, and will continue to do so. By stealing the peacock Mahsun hopes to associate himself with that timelessness, as an alternative to the exigencies of the present; but hunger eventually gets the better of him, and he is forced to eat it.
TABUTTA RÖVAŞATA introduces several of the motifs characteristic of Zaim's later work - the emphasis on the power of water to transcend merely human affairs, regular shots of a graveyard that once again emphasize the timeless theme - where past, present and future collide - and the regular shots of the protagonists standing by the water's edge, prompting us to reflect on the human condition. This is not just an indictment of contemporary Turkish life: Zaim wants us to reflect on all human life.
Mahsun (Ahmet Uğurlu) steals cars and sleeps inside only to save himself from the cold, and returns them when the sun shines .. he has no money, no profession, no future and no any intelligence, just a couple of friends and a peacock to talk to..he is no one in terms of what we expect from a man in present life, but he has everything in terms of what present life lacks of.. some scenes are very brave, drinking and pouring wine onto graveyard is neither something we tend to do nor have we seen before :) Mahsun's relation with the peacock worths watching, i think its one of the most interesting 3-5 scenes in Turkish Cinema, very close to be the first. I watched this film again and again, Ahmet Uğurlu performs his best work ever, this film shows us clearly that even he seems to be the right one for comedy films, he should have better not made any, he fits for such roles perfectly, one of the most dramatic and realistic films ever, a masterpiece from Derviş Zaim ...
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAysen Aydemir who played the heroin addict passed away before receiving an award for her role.
- Bandes originalesTavus Havasi
Written by Baba Zula
Performed by Baba Zula
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- How long is Somersault in a Coffin?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 15 minutes
- Couleur
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What is the Spanish language plot outline for Saut périlleux dans un cercueil (1996)?
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