Valley of the Wolves: Gladio
Valley of the Wolves: Gladio | |
---|---|
Theatrical poster | |
Directed by | Sadullah Şentürk |
Produced by | Raci Şaşmaz |
Written by |
Cüneyt Aysan Bahadır Özdener Raci Şaşmaz |
Starring |
Musa Uzunlar Ayfer Dönmez Tuğrul Çetiner |
Music by | Gökhan Kırdar |
Cinematography | Selahattin Sancaklı |
Edited by | Kemalettin Osmanlı |
Production company |
Pana Film |
Distributed by |
Özen Film Maxximum Film und Kunst |
Release date |
|
Running time | 122 minutes |
Country | Turkey |
Language | Turkish |
Box office | $4,703,086 |
Valley of the Wolves: Gladio (Turkish: Kurtlar Vadisi: Gladio) is a 2009 Turkish action film directed by Sadullah Şentürk. It follows the retired security intelligence agent İskender Büyük, as he decides to strike back against his one-time employers by revealing all he knows about Gladio. The film, which went on nationwide general release across Turkey on November 20, 2009 , was the fifth highest grossing Turkish film of 2009. It is part of the Valley of the Wolves media franchise, based on the Turkish television series of the same name, along with Valley of the Wolves: Iraq (2006) and Valley of the Wolves: Palestine (2010).[1][2][3][4]
Synopsis
Retired security intelligence agent Iskender Buyuk (Alexander the Great) has kept his government's secrets for years, but when the men he has sworn to protect suddenly deserts him, Isekender finds himself in the defendant's chair, with only young and inexperienced lawyer Ayse to represent his interests. Angered by this turn of events, Iskender decides to strike back against his one-time employers by revealing all he knows about covert op missions.
Cast
- Musa Uzunlar – İskender Büyük
- Tuğrul Çetiner – Bülent Fuat Aras
- Ayfer Dönmez – Ayse
- Ali Başar – Shahid Major Ahmet Cem Ersever
- Sezai Aydın – Turgut Özal
- Işıl Ertuna – Semra Özal
- Hakan İlçin – Gendarmerie Commander
- Köksal Engür – Process notes General
- Ali Rıza Soydan – Şener Pasha
- Sinan Pekinton – Judge
- Uğur Taşdemir – Announcer
- Hakan Vanlı – Journalist Ali
- Celalettin Demirel – Head guards
- Yurdaer Tosun – Ercüment
- Buket Aslan – İskender's Girlfriend
- Hüseyin Yirik – İskender's lawyer
- Erol Alpsoykan – Av. Haşim İçtürk
- Sinan Altuntaş – Security
- Mustafa Develi – Abdullah Öcalan
- Serap Ergen – Kurdish Women
- Rafet Özdemir – Prime Minister
- Cengiz Gürkısmet – Maestro
- Sinem Öçalır – Clerk
- Yıldıray Yıldızoğlu – Usher
- Ülkü Şahiner – Pasha's wife notes client
Release
The film opened in 311 screens across Turkey on November 20, 2009 at number 2 in the box office chart with an opening weekend gross of $1,510,896.[5]
Reception
Box office
The film was the fifth highest grossing Turkish film of 2009 with a total worldwide gross of $4,703,086.[5]
Reviews
Turkish Daily News reviewer Emrah Güler, states that the film "comes to theaters in the heat of the Ergenekon investigation, an alleged ultra-nationalistic organization with ties in the military, media and justice, and accused of terrorism, a media-favorite for the last six months," and "real questions on the organization PKK, coups in the last half-a-century, and alleged assassinations against previous presidents are answered through a fictitious deep throat". He recommends the film to "those who couldn’t get more of the original series, and those who feed on state conspiracies", but says that "the movie features a plethora of plot holes, inconsistencies within the script, with real time events, and with its predecessors. Those who are hoping for impressive action scenes like in Kurtlar Vadisi – Irak go home empty-handed as well". He finishes by saying: "those who refrain from subjective political dramas, and those who’re tired of hearing and reading about the never ending Ergenekon stories" should avoid it.[1][4]
According to Betül Akkaya Demirbaş in Today's Zaman: "It addresses Turkey’s years-long adventure with the deep state and illegal formations nested within the state and aims to provide an opportunity for movie fans to closely look at the “deep gangs” that attempted to stir and divide Turkey with subversive plots".
References
- 1 2 Güler, Emrah (2009-11-11). "Week in the movies: New moon over 'The Twilight'". Turkish Daily News. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
- ↑ "This week in theaters". Today's Zaman. 2009-11-21. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
- ↑ Akkaya Demirbaş, Betül (2009-11-22). "Movies carry Turkey’s heated issues to the big screen". Today's Zaman. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
- 1 2 Güler, Emrah (2009-11-26). "‘Valley of the Wolves’ hopes to spark more nationalism". Turkish Daily News. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
- 1 2 "Turkey Weekend Box Office for Kurtlar Vadisi: Gladio". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2010-02-24.
External links
- Valley of the Wolves: Gladio at AllMovie
- Valley of the Wolves: Gladio on IMDb
- Valley of the Wolves: Gladio at the TCM Movie Database