La pasión turca
- 1994
- 1h 52m
Desideria, a married Spanish woman who has a quite boring and hidden sex-life, goes to Istanbul where she meets Yaman, a Turkish tourist guide, who makes her discover new physical experience... Read allDesideria, a married Spanish woman who has a quite boring and hidden sex-life, goes to Istanbul where she meets Yaman, a Turkish tourist guide, who makes her discover new physical experiences.Desideria, a married Spanish woman who has a quite boring and hidden sex-life, goes to Istanbul where she meets Yaman, a Turkish tourist guide, who makes her discover new physical experiences.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 12 nominations total
- Ramiro
- (as Ramón Madaula, Ramon Madaula)
- Felisa
- (as Blanca Apilanez)
- Paulina
- (as Loles Leon)
- Denís
- (as Patrick Guillermin)
- Padre Alonso
- (as Pepe Cerro)
- Guía
- (as Mercedes Talegon)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
In essence, it's pretty similar to THE NAKED EYE - focusing as it does on an independent-minded woman's search for sexual fulfillment, which borders on obsession - though the details, obviously, are different; furthermore, this one has an added attraction in its exotic locale. The pace is appropriately languid, but the narrative is filled with enough ironic - if predictable - touches to keep one's interest throughout and, like Laura Morante in the later film, Ana Belen here delivers a committed central performance.
Should have got Almodovar to direct it, at least he might have got Alfredo Landa to play the part of the Turk to liven it up a bit!
However, Vicente Aranda, who may be considered one of our most representative film directors today, just does not hit it off with this film. I think mostly because somewhere along the line in transition from being a literary novel of subtle poeticness to being a somewhat crudely and hurriedly concocted passionate love affair in seething sithering Istanbul, especially laid on for Spanish tourists judging by the San Miguel beer spread out on the street-side café, quite a lot of deliberate delicacy got lost.
The result being a rather top-heavy show of macho bravura unbefitting intelligent women in today's modern Spain or anywhere else in Europe. The overbearing macho tendencies attributable to Islamics just does not fit in: the film becomes 'trasnochada' even before it starts.
I have seen this film about three times, unfortunately: and each time I like it less. Maybe it is because I suffer from acute manias with everything associated with Islamic mentality. Perhaps. I will not argue that: and of course accept that all manias are rather silly, especially including my own. But the fact remains that I was not brought up believing that women were like cattle and thus to be treated similarly. And that is what purportedly this film is bent on showing. Definitely one of Ana Belén's more important roles, but I am afraid that in this film things go dreadfully awry.
Did you know
- TriviaAntonio Gala publicly expressed his great dissatisfaction with the movie, arguing Vicente Aranda simplified the meaning of his novel.
- Quotes
Yaman: Love is like trade. A good love must fulfill two obligations: First, never loose, keep what you have. Second, never stake everything on one card. You musn't risk love in it's entirety, you must keep some reserves, just in case. If you don't do that, you become the other person's slave, and believe me, the other person becomes sick of his slave.
- How long is Turkish Passion?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 52m(112 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1