The Edge of Heaven (film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is on the film by Fatih Akın. For the song by Wham!, see "The Edge of Heaven".
The Edge of Heaven
(international title) Auf der anderen Seite (original title) |
|
---|---|
German promotional poster |
|
Directed by | Fatih Akın |
Produced by | Anka Film (Turkey),
Corazón International (Germany), Dorje Film (Italy), Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) (Germany) |
Written by | Fatih Akın |
Starring | Nurgül Yeşilçay
Baki Davrak Tuncel Kurtiz Hanna Schygulla Patrycia Ziolkowska Nursel Köse |
Music by | Shantel |
Cinematography | Rainer Klausmann |
Editing by | Andrew Bird |
Distributed by | The Match Factory (worldwide) Sharmill Films (Australia) |
Release date(s) | France May 23, 2007 (Cannes Film Festival)
Germany September 27, 2007 Turkey October 26, 2007 Australia April 24, 2008 |
Running time | 122 min. |
Country | Germany/Turkey |
Language | German/Turkish/English |
Official website | |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Edge of Heaven (international English title) (original title German: Auf der anderen Seite, Turkish: Yaşamın Kıyısında) is a 2007 Turkish-German film written and directed by Fatih Akın. The film won the Prix du scénario at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. It is selected for Germany's entry to contest at the 2007 Oscar.[1]
After making its worldwide debut at Cannes Film Festival in France, the film was shown at several international film festivals. It was released in Germany on September 27, 2007.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The Edge of Heaven is played out in Turkey and Germany. The figures travel between these countries and so travel through their own lives. Akın tells the story in calm pictures, unagitated and slow-paced. The emotional key to the film is death which is faced by each protagonist in a different way. Thus those initially uncommunicative people slowly begin to uncover themselves.
[edit] Plot
Retired widower Ali, a Turkish immigrant living in the German city of Bremen, believes to have found a solution to his loneliness as he meets Turkey-born prostitute Yeter[2].
He offers her a monthly payment to quit whoring and move in. After receiving threats from two radical islamic turkish thugs, she decides to accept his offer. His son Nejat, a professor of German literature, initially disapproves of Ali's choice of Yeter as a live-in girlfriend. However, he grows fond of her when he discovers that she sends money back home to Turkey for her daughter's college education.
Tension arises between Nejat and his father as Ali becomes obsessed that Yeter and his son may have become lovers. Yeter's sudden death, an accident caused by a drunken blow from Ali, serves to distance father and son further from each other emotionally. Ali is imprisoned and later deported to Turkey where he returns to his home town Trabzon on the Black Sea.
Nejat travels to Istanbul to search for Yeter's daughter Ayten and hopes to help pay for her education. He soon decides to settle in Turkey, running the German bookshop in Istanbul - in order to find Ayten, and also because being in Turkey reawakens his Turkish identity and makes him dissatisifed with the role teaching young Germans about Goethe (as he is shown doing in the early part of the film).
He is not aware of the fact that political activist Ayten is on the run from the Turkish police and is currently staying in Germany, hiding as an illegal immigrant and searching for her mother - nor that she had been present in one of his own lectures, sleeping in a corner of the lecure hall.
Penniless Ayten becomes friends and lovers with Lotte, a student who invites rebellious Ayten to stay in her home, a gesture which is not particularly welcome by her mother Susanne. Lotte decides to help Ayten search for her mother, who she believes works as a shoeseller. While driving, Lotte and Ayten are stopped in a regular police check and Ayten runs from the car. She is caught and the police learn of her false identity.
Lotte closely follows her plea for asylum, which is denied several months later, despite Susanne's financial support. Following her deportation Ayten is imprisoned in Turkey, where she befriends other political prisoners, as well as women imprisoned for killing their husbands.
Lotte travels to Turkey to free Ayten but quickly realises how little hope there is, as she is facing 15 to 20 years in jail. Over the telephone, Susanne pleads her to think of her future and return home. When Lotte refuses, her mother withdraws her financial support. She gets to know Nejat by chance and rents a room in his home to save expensive hotel costs.
Meeting Ayten in prison, Lotte follows her improprisoned lover's reqiest and collects a gun hidden in a secret place. After doing that, Lotte's purse, with the gun in it, is snatched by some small boys. She chases them and finds them sniffing glue and looking over the items in her purse; one boy is inspecting the found gun. She demands it back, after which the boy points at her and fires, to his surprise killing her.
Susanne decides to go to Istanbul and see where her daughter has been living these months. After reading her daughter's diary she decides to take on her daughter's mission of freeing Ayten who is awaiting verdict in jail. The death of Lotte is an international incident, and authorities offer Ayten freedom in exchange for information leading to the resolution of the incident.
Susanne offers her a place to stay with her at Nejat's house. Despite crossing paths several times throughout the film, neither Ayten's search for her mother nor Nejat's search for Ayten are ever resolved.
Following emotional moments with Susanne, Nejat journeys to reunite with his father, and the film ends with his wating on the shore for him to come back from fishing in the Black Sea. The open-ended conclusion leaves open the possibility that he would return to Istanbul to find Ayten staying in his own home - but also that some new chance event would again prevent his finding her.
[edit] Cast
- Tuncel Kurtiz as Ali Aksu, Turkish immigrant
- Baki Davrak as Nejat Aksu, son of Ali, German language teacher
- Nursel Köse as Yeter Öztürk, Turkish immigrant prostitute
- Nurgül Yeşilçay as Ayten Öztürk, daughter of Yeter, Turkish student
- Patrycia Ziolkowska as Charlotte "Lotte" Staub, student
- Hanna Schygulla as Susanne Staub, mother of Lotte
[edit] Filming locations
The film was shot in Bremen and Hamburg in Germany; at Taksim and Kadıköy in Istanbul, at the Black Sea coast in Trabzon in Turkey.
[edit] Release dates
- France May 23, 2007 (Cannes Film Festival)
- Finland June 15, 2007 (2007 Midnight Sun Film Festival)
- France July 5, 2007 (Festival Paris Cinéma)
- France July 7, 2007 (La Rochelle Film Festival)
- Thailand July 25, 2007 (Bangkok International Film Festival)
- Philippines August 8, 2007 (Cinemanila International Film Festival)
- Canada September 7, 2007 (Toronto Film Festival)
- Germany September 27, 2007
- Turkey October 26, 2007
- Italy November 9, 2007 (limited)
- Belgium November 14, 2007
- France November 14, 2007
- Czech Republic November 15, 2007
- Hong Kong January 24, 2008
- Netherlands February 7, 2008
- United Kingdom February 15, 2008
- Republic of China (Taiwan), March 7, 2008
- Australia April 24, 2008
[edit] Critical reception
The film received generally positive reviews from Western critics. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 87% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 30 reviews.[3] Metacritic reported the film had an average score of 81 out of 100, based on 14 reviews.[4]
[edit] Awards
Following the Best Screenplay Award received at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, the film won the Lino Brocka Award in the International Cinema category at the 2007 Cinemanila International Film Festival in the Philippines. The movie also won five awards at Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival (best director, editing, supporting actor, supporting actress and special jury award).
On October 24, 2007, the European Parliament awarded its newly established LUX prize for European cinema to Fatih Akın's film.
On November 10, 2007, the film won the Critics Award at the European Cinema Festival, in Seville.
On December 1, 2007, the movie won the best screenplay award at European Film Awards, while it was also nominated for the best director and the best film.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ NDR Press notice September 19, 2007 (German)
- ^ Yeter ("Enough") and İmdat ("Emergency") are names of choice among families with too many children.
- ^ The Edge of Heaven Movie Reviews, Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
- ^ Edge of Heaven, The (2008): Reviews. Metacritic. Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
[edit] External links
- Official site (German)
- The Edge of Heaven at the Internet Movie Database
- The Edge of Heaven at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Edge of Heaven at Metacritic
- The Edge of Heaven at Box Office Mojo
- The Edge of Heaven at Allmovie
- Sharmill Films
Awards | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Volver |
Cannes Film Festival Prix du scénario 2007 |
Succeeded by incumbent |
Preceded by new creation |
Lux Prize for European Cinema 2007 |
Succeeded by incumbent |
Preceded by Takva |
Golden Orange Dr. Avni Tolunay Jury Special Award for Best Picture 2007 |
Succeeded by incumbent |
|
|