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The Father

Baba

Turkey

1971

96 Min
Color
Turkish
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DIR Yilmaz Güney

PROD İrfan Ünal

SCR Yilmaz Güney

DP Gani Turanli

CAST Yilmaz Güney, Müşerref Tezcan, Kuzey Vargın, Yildirim Önal, Ender Sonku, Nedret Güvenç, Yeşim Tan, Aytaç Arman

MUSIC Metin Bükey

Synopsis

The Father (Turkish: Baba) is a 1971 Turkish prison drama film, written and directed by Yılmaz Güney, featuring Güney as the head of a family he’s unable to support, who takes responsibility for a murder he didn’t commit, so his family will be taken care of. The film went on nationwide general release across the country on December 1, 1971. —Turkish Cinema (Türk Sineması) on Facebook

Director

Original

Yilmaz Güney

Güney and his work were almost entirely unknown outside of his homeland Turkey until his 1981 escape from imprisonment in Turkey and his “discovery” the following year at the Cannes Film Festival for his autobiographical screenplay for Yol (1982), the festival’s grand prize winner. Born in 1937 in a village near the southern city of Adana, Güney studied law and economics at the universities in Ankara and Istanbul, but by the age of 21 he found himself actively involved in filmmaking. As Yesilcam, the Turkish studio system, grew in strength, a handful of directors, including Atif Yilmaz, began to use the cinema as a means of addressing the problems of the people. Only state-sanctioned melodramas, war films and play adaptations had previously played in Turkish theaters, but these new filmmakers began to fill the screens with more artistic, personal and relevant pictures of Turkish life. The most popular name to emerge from the Young Turkish Cinema was that of Yilmaz Güney. Güney was a… read more

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