Recai Karagöz, the director of Love Tactics 2, created Art of Love, also known as Ask Sanati in Turkish, as a homage to the French Lupin & the English Red Notice.
The film pays homage to classic art heist movies while also delivering a fresh take on the genre. It features a talented ensemble cast that includes some of the industry’s biggest names.
Fans of crime thrillers and action-packed dramas will undoubtedly find this film to be an exciting and entertaining watch when it debuts on Netflix in the coming months.
Art of Love (Aşk Sanatı) | Official Trailer
Netflix’s “Art Of Love” release date is out! The streaming giant released the film’s trailer recently, giving fans a promising insight into its dark and tragic storyline.
While Guney is a wealthy and sophisticated art thief, Alin is a reputable Interpol officer looking for the former.
The Art of Love...
The film pays homage to classic art heist movies while also delivering a fresh take on the genre. It features a talented ensemble cast that includes some of the industry’s biggest names.
Fans of crime thrillers and action-packed dramas will undoubtedly find this film to be an exciting and entertaining watch when it debuts on Netflix in the coming months.
Art of Love (Aşk Sanatı) | Official Trailer
Netflix’s “Art Of Love” release date is out! The streaming giant released the film’s trailer recently, giving fans a promising insight into its dark and tragic storyline.
While Guney is a wealthy and sophisticated art thief, Alin is a reputable Interpol officer looking for the former.
The Art of Love...
- 2/22/2024
- by Mantisha
- https://dailyresearchplot.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/new-sam
When will The Club Season 2 be released on Netflix, and what can we expect from the series? I am pretty sure that every one of the youngsters who is reading this article must be fond of going to the club.
And at least once a month they will be also going to the class but what if we are going to tell you that the club itself is going to enter your house!!!!!
Yes, you read it right that The Club Season 2 will be coming really very soon. Those who have seen the first season of this periodical drama must be really excited to watch Season 2 of it and want to know more about it. But for all those who have to watch the first season of the series then we are here to brief you about it.
The series is set against the bright backdrop of a 1950s Istanbul nightclub,...
And at least once a month they will be also going to the class but what if we are going to tell you that the club itself is going to enter your house!!!!!
Yes, you read it right that The Club Season 2 will be coming really very soon. Those who have seen the first season of this periodical drama must be really excited to watch Season 2 of it and want to know more about it. But for all those who have to watch the first season of the series then we are here to brief you about it.
The series is set against the bright backdrop of a 1950s Istanbul nightclub,...
- 8/31/2023
- by Bhavi Parihar
- https://dailyresearchplot.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/new-sam
“The Club,” Netflix‘s popular Turkish series, has finally announced a return date for the much-awaited Season 2.
Netflix’s ‘The Club (formerly titled ‘Kulüp’) is a historical TV series set in 1950s Istanbul that beautifully depicts the charm and elegance of the city’s cosmopolitan culture.
Through its emphasis on Matilda, a seamstress who gets work at a nightclub, the series provides a realistic look into the lifestyles of working women.
Matilda enters the lounge to reunite with her separated daughter, but the questionable nature of the work quickly overshadows her life and causes her to doubt her ethics.
Maria also realizes that her beliefs contrast sharply with those around her. As a result, she regularly fights with her coworkers, resulting in further difficulties.
The thriller drama, created by Zeynep Günay Tan, has received praise for its actors, narrative, and remarkable representation of 1950s Istanbul. After completing Season 1, fans were utterly immersed in the series.
Netflix’s ‘The Club (formerly titled ‘Kulüp’) is a historical TV series set in 1950s Istanbul that beautifully depicts the charm and elegance of the city’s cosmopolitan culture.
Through its emphasis on Matilda, a seamstress who gets work at a nightclub, the series provides a realistic look into the lifestyles of working women.
Matilda enters the lounge to reunite with her separated daughter, but the questionable nature of the work quickly overshadows her life and causes her to doubt her ethics.
Maria also realizes that her beliefs contrast sharply with those around her. As a result, she regularly fights with her coworkers, resulting in further difficulties.
The thriller drama, created by Zeynep Günay Tan, has received praise for its actors, narrative, and remarkable representation of 1950s Istanbul. After completing Season 1, fans were utterly immersed in the series.
- 8/22/2023
- by Mantisha
- https://dailyresearchplot.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/new-sam
At this year’s edition of PÖFF, a new competition titled “Critics’ Picks” was introduced with all thirteen films celebrating either world- or international premieres here in Tallinn. Only three Asian films compete for the award: Jun Robles Lana’s two-men drama “About Us But Not About Us”, a pretty humorless Iranian comedy “A Childless Vilage” directed by Raza Jamali, and Cigdem Sezgin’s sophomore feature – drama “Suna”, about a woman left with barely any options to live her life the way she would want to. Back in 2016, Sezgin’s debut “Wedding Dance” was in the First Feature competition of PÖFF.
Suna (Nurcan Eren) is in her early 50’s, left without assets and living, more or less, the life of a nomad who moves from house to house of diverse relatives. When they get tired of the situation, she simply gets introduced to a...
Suna (Nurcan Eren) is in her early 50’s, left without assets and living, more or less, the life of a nomad who moves from house to house of diverse relatives. When they get tired of the situation, she simply gets introduced to a...
- 11/23/2022
- by Marina D. Richter
- AsianMoviePulse
A long night spent looking for a body in the desert sets this Turkish crime drama apart as an exhilarating masterpiece
Few films are about simply waiting and talking, but this is one; a film in which, for most of the time, nothing appears to be happening – but, in fact, everything is. Nuri Bilge Ceylan's new film is long and difficult, and perhaps not for everyone, but I can only say it is a kind of masterpiece: audacious, uncompromising and possessed of a mysterious grandeur in its wintry pessimism. Nothing in it reminds me of Sergio Leone, incidentally – unless it is that long, long wait at the beginning of Once Upon a Time in the West, with the keening wind-wheel and sighing desert. Actually, this has something of Antonioni, or Chekhov or even the later stories of Tolstoy.
The action extends over a single, rainy, sleepless night and into...
Few films are about simply waiting and talking, but this is one; a film in which, for most of the time, nothing appears to be happening – but, in fact, everything is. Nuri Bilge Ceylan's new film is long and difficult, and perhaps not for everyone, but I can only say it is a kind of masterpiece: audacious, uncompromising and possessed of a mysterious grandeur in its wintry pessimism. Nothing in it reminds me of Sergio Leone, incidentally – unless it is that long, long wait at the beginning of Once Upon a Time in the West, with the keening wind-wheel and sighing desert. Actually, this has something of Antonioni, or Chekhov or even the later stories of Tolstoy.
The action extends over a single, rainy, sleepless night and into...
- 3/16/2012
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, co-written and directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan, is a Turkish police procedural based on the real-life experiences of one of the writers. The story follows a group of men as they travel around the Anatolian steppe at night in three cars in search of a buried body. The main homicide suspect, Kenan (Firat Tanis), is being escorted from one location to the next as part of a deal he’s made with police Commissar Naci (Yilmaz Erdogan) to identify the grave of the man he murdered. In exchange for the informaiton, he hopes to secure...
- 2/6/2012
- Pastemagazine.com
Trailer for Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, starring Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan The Cinema Guild drama and winner of the Prize of the Grand Jury , and nominee of the Palm d'Or at this year's Cannes Film Festival, opens on January 4th. Starring in the Turkish film both scripted and directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Three Monkeys, Climates, Distant) are Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan, Taner Birsel, Ahmet Mümtaz Taylan, Firat Tanis and Ercan Kesal. In the dead of night, a group of men – among them a police commissioner, a prosecutor, a doctor and a murder suspect – drive through the Anatolian countryside, the serpentine roads and rolling hills lit only by the headlights of their cars. They are searching for a corpse, the victim of a brutal murder. The suspect, who claims he was drunk, can’t remember where he buried the body...
- 11/17/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Trailer for Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, starring Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan The Cinema Guild drama and winner of the Prize of the Grand Jury , and nominee of the Palm d'Or at this year's Cannes Film Festival, opens on January 4th. Starring in the Turkish film both scripted and directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Three Monkeys, Climates, Distant) are Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan, Taner Birsel, Ahmet Mümtaz Taylan, Firat Tanis and Ercan Kesal. In the dead of night, a group of men – among them a police commissioner, a prosecutor, a doctor and a murder suspect – drive through the Anatolian countryside, the serpentine roads and rolling hills lit only by the headlights of their cars. They are searching for a corpse, the victim of a brutal murder. The suspect, who claims he was drunk, can’t remember where he buried the body...
- 11/17/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Trailer for Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, starring Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan The Cinema Guild drama and winner of the Prize of the Grand Jury , and nominee of the Palm d'Or at this year's Cannes Film Festival, opens on January 4th. Starring in the Turkish film both scripted and directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Three Monkeys, Climates, Distant) are Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan, Taner Birsel, Ahmet Mümtaz Taylan, Firat Tanis and Ercan Kesal. In the dead of night, a group of men – among them a police commissioner, a prosecutor, a doctor and a murder suspect – drive through the Anatolian countryside, the serpentine roads and rolling hills lit only by the headlights of their cars. They are searching for a corpse, the victim of a brutal murder. The suspect, who claims he was drunk, can’t remember where he buried the body...
- 11/17/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Trailer for Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Once Upon a Time in Anatola, starring Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan The Cinema Guild drama and winner of the Prize of the Grand Jury , and nominee of the Palm d'Or at this year's Cannes Film Festival, opens on January 4th. Starring in the Turkish film both scripted and directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Three Monkeys, Climates, Distant) are Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan, Taner Birsel, Ahmet Mümtaz Taylan, Firat Tanis and Ercan Kesal. In the dead of night, a group of men – among them a police commissioner, a prosecutor, a doctor and a murder suspect – drive through the Anatolian countryside, the serpentine roads and rolling hills lit only by the headlights of their cars. They are searching for a corpse, the victim of a brutal murder. The suspect, who claims he was drunk, can’t remember where he buried the body...
- 11/17/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Updated through 5/23.
"On Friday, the 64th Cannes Film Festival presented a selection that grabbed critics and could nab the Palme d'Or on Sunday if the jury rises to the occasion," writes the New York Times' Manohla Dargis. "Both beautiful and beautifully observed, with a delicate touch and flashes of humor and horror, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, from the Turkish director Nuri Bilge Ceylan, is an ambitious, leisurely inquiry into a specific world — the haunting land of its title — that transcends borders. Touching on life, death and everything in between in 157 minutes, this metaphysical road movie follows a police investigation that, when the story opens, has led its characters into near dark."
"Anatolia's imposing title and 157-minute running time would seem to signify a butt-numbing endurance test for all but the most hardened festival and arthouse patrons," writes Justin Chang in Variety. "Doing little to quell this perception, more...
"On Friday, the 64th Cannes Film Festival presented a selection that grabbed critics and could nab the Palme d'Or on Sunday if the jury rises to the occasion," writes the New York Times' Manohla Dargis. "Both beautiful and beautifully observed, with a delicate touch and flashes of humor and horror, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, from the Turkish director Nuri Bilge Ceylan, is an ambitious, leisurely inquiry into a specific world — the haunting land of its title — that transcends borders. Touching on life, death and everything in between in 157 minutes, this metaphysical road movie follows a police investigation that, when the story opens, has led its characters into near dark."
"Anatolia's imposing title and 157-minute running time would seem to signify a butt-numbing endurance test for all but the most hardened festival and arthouse patrons," writes Justin Chang in Variety. "Doing little to quell this perception, more...
- 5/23/2011
- MUBI
Nuri Bilge Ceylan has become a name synonymous with the more traditional type of auteur that the Cannes film festival reveres. In his sixth film and also his longest to date (also the longest film playing in competition) Once Upon a Time in Anatolia is a morality tale that reflects the state of mind of the Turkish people. Known for long, steady shots that reveal mystery and beauty similar to the styles of Abbas Kiarostami, even Andrei Tarkovsky, Ceylan has mastered his unique style of Turkish cinema that evokes philosophical questions about life. And while he seemed to have perfected his method with his previous films Uzak and Climates, Ceylan takes a different turn with his latest film. Combining the mystery of a dead body buried in the hills of Anatolia with the spark of an existential journey for its protagonist, the drama mirrors issues the country faces today.
Opening...
Opening...
- 5/23/2011
- by Raffi Asdourian
- The Film Stage
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