El Turco
- Fernsehserie
- 2025–
- 45 Min.
Die Geschichte von Balaban, einem Soldaten der Janitscharenarmee, der sich nach der Schlacht von Wien 1683 im norditalienischen Moena niederlässt und für die Rechte der dortigen Bevölkerung ... Alles lesenDie Geschichte von Balaban, einem Soldaten der Janitscharenarmee, der sich nach der Schlacht von Wien 1683 im norditalienischen Moena niederlässt und für die Rechte der dortigen Bevölkerung kämpft.Die Geschichte von Balaban, einem Soldaten der Janitscharenarmee, der sich nach der Schlacht von Wien 1683 im norditalienischen Moena niederlässt und für die Rechte der dortigen Bevölkerung kämpft.
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Empfohlene Bewertungen
This is fantastic international series with absolutely gripping plot which starts at frame one and finishes at last frame of episode qui ding plot to opening of potential season 2. Can Yaman has delivered master performance which glues you to the screen from get go. His portrayal of torment and pain leaves you breathless while on other side his performance in love scenes with Gloria are completely convincing. Greta Ferro delivers incredible heroin Gloria with complete conviction and Will Kemp and Kieran O'Reilley deliver stunning antagonists. The shout also goes to Magnus Samuelson and his performance as Gunther.... This is must watch and must season 2 project.
For those who have studied the historical epic of reference, it is truly like being transported there, between magic, superstitions, poverty, heroic impulses and divisions between castes and peoples. The Ottoman Empire of that presses at the gates of Catholic Europe. The characters are all well characterized, they have their own little-big story to tell.... Hasan Balaban, rejected and unjustly accused, finds courage to redeem himself and take his place among the righteous. Glory is his cure for the wounds of the body and, above all, of the soul two strangers, two lost souls who find, in each other, their own.
I highly recommend this series to all. This series is very well made and all actors involved worked with great passion.
Both protagonists have a great role with much to tell. A beautiful romance without making it cheesy.
Hassan is an educated man. Brave, but very vulnerable. Can Yaman portrayed him with honor to an emotional character....but not at all overdone! Such a pure an authentic actor is seldomly seen. Also his fighting scenes were great.
Gloria, (Greta Ferro) is the one who takes this story to modern times. Her femine energy is an example as well as a tribute to all women.
Story well build. Every scene is meaningful.
Speciale applause for Will Kemp.
Soecial applause screenplay and direction Special applause to set design.
Only one aspect that was a bit off...the very native villagers had all different accents. From posh English to Irish and even American.. that was odd and thus distracting
Great watch!!
Both protagonists have a great role with much to tell. A beautiful romance without making it cheesy.
Hassan is an educated man. Brave, but very vulnerable. Can Yaman portrayed him with honor to an emotional character....but not at all overdone! Such a pure an authentic actor is seldomly seen. Also his fighting scenes were great.
Gloria, (Greta Ferro) is the one who takes this story to modern times. Her femine energy is an example as well as a tribute to all women.
Story well build. Every scene is meaningful.
Speciale applause for Will Kemp.
Soecial applause screenplay and direction Special applause to set design.
Only one aspect that was a bit off...the very native villagers had all different accents. From posh English to Irish and even American.. that was odd and thus distracting
Great watch!!
El Turco is more than just a period drama-it's a fascinating study of identity, displacement, and the burden of legacy, made all the more compelling by the casting of Can Yaman as Balaban. The most striking aspect of this series is not just its sweeping visuals or high-stakes narrative, but how the life of its lead actor seems to eerily echo the arc of the very character he portrays.
Balaban, a Janissary warrior presumed dead after the Siege of Vienna, finds himself in a foreign land, straddling cultures, loyalties, and identities. He becomes both an outsider and a savior-a bridge between East and West. Can Yaman's own journey, from a high-profile career in Turkish television to a controversial yet ambitious reinvention in Europe, mirrors this balancing act. Like Balaban, Yaman has had to navigate the expectations of his homeland while carving out a new identity abroad, often at great personal cost.
This resonance feels almost prophetic. Balaban is haunted by his past and driven by a vision of something greater than himself-much like Yaman, who has become a symbol of the modern Turkish star attempting to transcend national borders. In portraying a character who must reinvent himself in exile, Yaman effectively performs his own story. The sense of exile, of attempting to do good in a world that views you with suspicion, feels lived-in, not acted. It gives the performance an emotional heft that goes beyond script and direction.
There's a meta-layer to El Turco that can't be ignored. In many ways, the series feels like a dramatized prophecy of Can Yaman's real-life transformation-a tale of legacy, reinvention, and a search for belonging. It's that rare moment when life and art align, and the result is a performance that is not only convincing but eerily self-reflective.
El Turco becomes more than a historical drama-it becomes a mirror. And in that mirror, we see not just Balaban's struggle, but Can Yaman's own. The prophecy is not in the plot-it's in the casting. Makes you believe in divine intervention.
Balaban, a Janissary warrior presumed dead after the Siege of Vienna, finds himself in a foreign land, straddling cultures, loyalties, and identities. He becomes both an outsider and a savior-a bridge between East and West. Can Yaman's own journey, from a high-profile career in Turkish television to a controversial yet ambitious reinvention in Europe, mirrors this balancing act. Like Balaban, Yaman has had to navigate the expectations of his homeland while carving out a new identity abroad, often at great personal cost.
This resonance feels almost prophetic. Balaban is haunted by his past and driven by a vision of something greater than himself-much like Yaman, who has become a symbol of the modern Turkish star attempting to transcend national borders. In portraying a character who must reinvent himself in exile, Yaman effectively performs his own story. The sense of exile, of attempting to do good in a world that views you with suspicion, feels lived-in, not acted. It gives the performance an emotional heft that goes beyond script and direction.
There's a meta-layer to El Turco that can't be ignored. In many ways, the series feels like a dramatized prophecy of Can Yaman's real-life transformation-a tale of legacy, reinvention, and a search for belonging. It's that rare moment when life and art align, and the result is a performance that is not only convincing but eerily self-reflective.
El Turco becomes more than a historical drama-it becomes a mirror. And in that mirror, we see not just Balaban's struggle, but Can Yaman's own. The prophecy is not in the plot-it's in the casting. Makes you believe in divine intervention.
10ftonia
After watching the first episode one needs to go on watching and when the episodes end one needs more. I lijed everything of this series, the acting, the costumes, the historical background, the atmosphere...it's intriguing. It's historical but also a bit of a fairy tale with the eternal fight between good and evil. I liked all the actors but, since I have watched the previous series of Can Yaman, I must say that this series shows his growth as an actor and his multiple talents. He really worked a lot and learnt a lot for this role and one can see the good results of his committment. One special mention for Domenico Sica for the amazing scenography. Applause for Greta Ferro and all the cast.
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- WissenswertesThe series is inspired by the novel "El Turco - II. Viyana Kusatmasinin Bilinmeyen Yönleri" by Orhan Yeniaras. In the novel, the Ottoman intelligence officer Balaban Aga, who was found wounded during the Second Siege of Vienna and rescued by the people of Moena, settles in their village and organizes a successful peasant uprising against the overlords who overtaxed the people. This novel tells the extraordinary story of Balaban Aga, but also the unknown aspects of the Second Siege of Vienna.
- PatzerBalaban tells Topo the story about his family home and his father who took him to see the sultan. Later, Decebal tells Elda that the five of them, including Balaban, lived in the janissary barracks as orphans.
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Details
- Laufzeit
- 45 Min.
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 16:9 HD
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