Our Rating: 9.0

IMDb Ratings : 7 .7

Genre: Crime | Drama

Cast: Muhammet Uzuner, Yilmaz Erdogan, Taner Birsel

Country: Turkey | Bosnia and Herzegovina

Language: Turkish

Runtime: 150 min

Color: Color





Summary: In the rural area around the Anatolian town of Keskin, the local prosecutor, police commissioner, and doctor lead a search for a victim of a murder to whom a suspect named Kenan and his mentally challenged brother confessed. However, the search is proving more difficult than expected as Kenan is fuzzy as to the body's exact location. As the group continues looking, its members can't help but chat among themselves about both trivia and their deepest concerns in an investigation that is proving more trying than any of them expected.

O nce Upon a Time in Anatolia is an award winning motion picture directed by Turkish movie maker Nuri Bilge Ceylan. E ssentially a police procedural, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia also serves to highlight the complexities associated with the human psyche. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia serves to be a case study on how humans behave, especially when made to step out of the comfort zone. The world of cinema today finds itself at the crossroads. In a bid to satiate the ever growing demands of the money mongering business moguls the creative aspects of cinema are often forced to take a back seat. The commercialization is not new to cinema, and is something that cannot be done away with. After all, everyone has the right to eke out a living. However, what is worrying is that the business sharks that rule the movie arena merely treat cinema as a money making instrument. This naked opportunism is not only undermining the efforts of the great visionaries of cinema like D. W. Griffith, Cecil B. DeMille, Yasujiro Ozu, Dadasaheb Phalke, Sergei Eisenstein, Charles Chaplin, and Fritz Lang, who had nurtured cinema with their blood and sweat, but is also posing a great threat to its evolution as an art form.





Nuri Bilge Ceylan at Cannes Film Festival Over the last century, cinema has been undergoing a continuous transformation from being a mere medium of indulgence to being a profound means of self-realization to being a tool to generate the moolah, but in the process it has seemed to lost its golden glory. A majority of attempts to rekindle the dying spirit of cinema are curbed ruthlessly by the juggernaut of commercialization, but when a valiant effort does succeed in subverting the paradigm, it gives rise to parallel streams in cinema. Amidst the pervasive darkness there are only a handful of creative minds, who are still devoted to fulfilling the true purpose of cinema, not only as an art form, but also as a great source of enlightenment for the masses. These apostles, who have become the raison d’être for cinema’s purposeful existence, are contemporary cinema’s only hope to fulfill its promise as an art form. Today the world of cinema finds itself at the crossroads. While t he Japanese, Italian, and Russian cinemas are showing great resurgence thanks to the efforts of Kawase, Sorrentino, Zvyagintsev, respectively, the Iranian, Korean, Argentine, and Turkish cinemas too have been showing great promise. Over the last few decades, Iranian Cinema has seen emergence of auteurs like Abbas Kiarostami, Bahman Ghobadi, and Majid Majidi. Korean auteur Chan-wook Park has delighted the world with his first-rate works like ‘ Oldboy ’. Argentina has produced auteurs like the late Fabian Bielinsky , ubiquitously renowned for his two motion pictures, 'Nine Queens' and 'The Aura' , and Juan José Campanella, whose ‘ The Secret in Their Eyes ’ won the 2009 Oscar for the Best Foreign Picture. As far as the contemporary Turkish Cinema is concerned, it's helmed by arguably two of the greatest filmmakers of our time: Nuri Bilge Ceylan and Semih Kaplanoglu (renowned for his sublime " The Yusuf Trilogy ") . Ceylan's singularly evocative style not only makes his work poignant and thought-provoking, but, I daresay, also puts him in the same league as Kurosawa and Tarkovsky .





A Still from Ceylan's Three Monkeys A Still from Leone's The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Anatolia . The less one says about Once Upon a Time in Anatolia the better it is, for its true delight lies in viewing, and hence any more elaboration than what is needed would turn out to be extremely futile. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia is Ceylan’s finest achievement till date, and has already earned him some fine accolades including the coveted Grand Prix at Cannes. Ceylan delivered a punch with his stunning family tragedy ‘Three Monkeys’ in 2008. He incredibly manages an encore with his latest flick, the brutal yet brilliant, Once Upon a Time in. The less one says about Once Upon a Time in Anatolia the better it is, for its true delight lies in viewing, and hence any more elaboration than what is needed would turn out to be extremely futile. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia is Ceylan’s finest achievement till date, and has already earned him some fine accolades including the coveted Grand Prix at Cannes. The two ‘Once Upon a Time’ movies by Sergio Leone were indeed masterpieces and this is no less, at least one in the making that is expected to withstand the test of the time. Just like with Leone, Ceylan’s camera does all the talking with the dialogue itself taking the back seat. Even in its subsidiary role, the dialogue never loses its weight and packs the punch whenever the need arises. The laconicism in dialogue is well substituted by the cinematographic detail, which forms the backbone of Ceylan’s work. The panoramic shots of the Anatolian Steppes are highly reminiscent of Leone’s widescreen cinematography in the ‘Dollars Trilogy’ . The latent wilderness of the Anatolian Steppes is greatly analogous to the secrets that lay hidden in the hearts of the deeply convoluted characters. The deliberate pace of Once Upon a Time in Anatolia adds a great detail to the plot, and also paves the way for character development that is seldom seen in modern-day cinema. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia is a fine concoction of Crime, Suspense, and Drama that offers a deep insight into the human emotions. The movie also offers a great insight into the complex procedure adopted by the police to solve murder cases, and the role of autopsy in estimating the actual cause of death.





A Still from Once Upon a Time in Anatolia Once Upon a Time in Anatolia acquaints the viewer with the dark side of human psyche. The stark beauty symbolizes the pain—that the characters have experienced right through their lives—which has robbed their inner peace and beauty, and has made them ugly and brutal. The murder mystery that lies at the very core of the plot is just one small part of a highly complex puzzle that has much more to it than meets the eye. The plot allows each character’s caricature to have multiple layers, a facet that adds great depth to the movie, and makes second viewing absolutely essential. The driver, the police commissioner, the prosecutor, the accused, and the doctor, who at first come across as run-of-the-mill characters of the quotidian, are in actuality bearers of deeply eccentric personas, victimized by the vicissitudes of fate, stuck in the middle of nowhere, waiting desperately for their eventual doom. Once Upon a Time in Anatolia is groundbreaking in the sense that in it's endeavor to unmask the duplicity associated with the human nature it's not limited to exposing one sex in particular, for it simultaneously succeeds in depicting the harsh and whimsical side of feminine disposition when subjected to doubt and adversity.



The Enchanting Anatolian Vistas in the Night One very unique feature of the movie is the striking yet consistent difference that exists between what the characters try to project, and what actually is going inside their diabolical minds, something that only the viewer is made aware of, but not always. The night scenes in the first half of the movie are absolutely astonishing to watch. The cavalcade of cars moving ahead in the pitch black darkness, made visible by the projection of their head lights, is symbolic of hope amidst abject distress when everything is lost and there’s is no place to run or hide.



Once Upon a Time in Anatolia: An Angel in the Dark The scene that’s my absolute favorite, and that each and every time leaves me completely speechless and awestruck, is the one in which the mayor’s seraphic daughter serves tea to the guests with her pristine, entrancing beauty stimulating a sense of delirium not only in minds of the guests, but also in minds of the viewers. Her piety and pulchritude is incorruptible to such an extent that it has the power to purge the evil that resides in others. The divine glow of her angelic face under the lamp light is worth the luminosity of a million stars in the Universe.



