Kurdish cinema

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kurdish cinema (Kurdish: فلمی کوردی), for the first time in Armenia, taken in 1926, Smith began Zare and in the 2000s began to rise. December 28, 1895 the first public demonstration was organized by the Lumière brothers , and 31 years after the movie was filmed Zare. Kurdish cinema is one of the leading names in Turkey Yilmaz Güney's films in the South, but the Turkish language is not the language of Kurdish cinema çekilmiştir.Kürt despite all the difficulties is a very well-established and growing eskidir.Kürt cinema began to develop numerous movies available.

Bahman Ghobadi, Iranian/Kurdish film director in San Sebastian (Spain)
Poster of Yol

Today, the Federal Region of Kurdistan 25 short films were made.

Kurdish cinema mainly evokes the poverty and sufferings of the Kurdish people in the Middle East. Yilmaz Güney, Hiner Saleem, Bahman Qubadi, Mano Khalil, Shero Rauf, Jano Rosebiani, Kazim Oz, Shewket Amin Korki, Havi Ibrahim, Hisham Zaman, Jay Jonroy' and Yüksel Yavuz are among the better known Kurdish directors. The following is a list of some better known Kurdish films:

Kurdish Film Files: http://tcnarchive.blogspot.com/2006/10/kurdish-film-files.html


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.