CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.7/10
18 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un joven profesor espera ser destinado a Estambul tras cumplir el servicio obligatorio en un pequeño pueblo. Tras una larga espera, pierde toda esperanza de escapar de esta vida sombría. Sin... Leer todoUn joven profesor espera ser destinado a Estambul tras cumplir el servicio obligatorio en un pequeño pueblo. Tras una larga espera, pierde toda esperanza de escapar de esta vida sombría. Sin embargo, su colega le ayuda a recuperarse.Un joven profesor espera ser destinado a Estambul tras cumplir el servicio obligatorio en un pequeño pueblo. Tras una larga espera, pierde toda esperanza de escapar de esta vida sombría. Sin embargo, su colega le ayuda a recuperarse.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 15 premios ganados y 10 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
A not very pleasant character is the lead. He is selfish, self regretting, seeks love of too young girls, wants a women, because a friend wants her, has no aim to help other people, talks a lot about bad circumstances, but does nothing to improve something. Truly, not somebody we want to follow as lead character. But .... movies are long enough to do a lot of self reflecting during viewing. And in the end I had to admit to myself: my own character is - very sadly - quite close to that of this lead character. And he survives - so I might survive, too.
Don't be afraid of the movie length. In fact I could have studied the characters for another hour... Fully recommended !
Don't be afraid of the movie length. In fact I could have studied the characters for another hour... Fully recommended !
Probably Nuri Bilge Ceylan's movie with the most dialog. If you don't mind spending three and a half hours sitting, you will watch it with interest. The acting is incredibly successful. Deniz Cellioglu's acting as Samet is incredible. Merve Dizdar had already proven her success by winning the best actress award at the Cannes film festival for her acting in this movie. Centering on a handful of teachers in a snow-covered village in Anatolia, we watch an extraordinary story with a great script. Although the prolonged dialogues sometimes slow down the pace, I think you will enjoy the film in general. Especially the naturalness of the small actors in the student roles is magnificent. During Nuray and Samet's long conversation at the dinner table, there are inconsistencies in terms of continuity in the positions of the actors at different camera angles. Ceylan is already a master photographer. He reflected this mastery in his movie. I found his use of the camera very successful, especially in tight spaces. Some of the sentences interspersed between the dialogues still impress me. It will be very surprising if this movie is not among the best foreign film nominees for the Oscars. It was one of the two movies I saw this year that I can say I liked very much. I hope the majority feel the same way.
As a caveat , I watched this on a 10 hr flight with subtitles only, no audio, and was completely drawn in during the entire thing. Visually, the shots are well composed and exposed, a feature completely absent from American film.
I consider this a cinematic portrayal of Fyodor Dostoevsky's Underground Man in Notes from Underground. The main character is intelligent, he makes valid arguments. But he is also a liar. He is fearful and jealous, but conceals it well from all in the tale but the viewer.
The latter quarter of the film broke my heart. It leaves you with a feeling of wasted potential; the main character considers himself a lamenter of this waste, but is himself wasteful and destructive of what little hope there is in those around him. Brilliant story.
I consider this a cinematic portrayal of Fyodor Dostoevsky's Underground Man in Notes from Underground. The main character is intelligent, he makes valid arguments. But he is also a liar. He is fearful and jealous, but conceals it well from all in the tale but the viewer.
The latter quarter of the film broke my heart. It leaves you with a feeling of wasted potential; the main character considers himself a lamenter of this waste, but is himself wasteful and destructive of what little hope there is in those around him. Brilliant story.
Once again, N. B. Ceylan has presented a magnificent gift to his audience and all cinema-lovers.
Ceylan, successfully following some essential footsteps of his former movies "Winter Sleep" and "The Wild Peer Tree", portraits the crises of restricted lives of (dazzlingly perfomed) characters feeling stuck in a provincial region of Turkey. It is even possible to call these movies a trilogy on masculinity, conflicts of intellectual class, "banality of evil" (as Hannah Arendt calls) and anti-heroes stuck in provincial stability, seeking for so-called "a better life elsewhere."
Regarding the visual narration of the movie, it is obvious that Ceylan has embraced a number of innovation on designing the visual aspects of the story; moving cameras, short-cuts for dialogue scenes etc. Nevertheless, the movie also preserves the beauty of Ceylan's well-known photographic cinema language.
Still, "Onca Upon A Time in Anatolia", among the works of N. B. Ceylan, is a cinematic top to me. And surely it is an extemely high bar for not only Turkish cinema. In this context, it may be asserted that "About Dry Grasses" could have easily been called a masterpiece if it belonged to any other director.
Ceylan, successfully following some essential footsteps of his former movies "Winter Sleep" and "The Wild Peer Tree", portraits the crises of restricted lives of (dazzlingly perfomed) characters feeling stuck in a provincial region of Turkey. It is even possible to call these movies a trilogy on masculinity, conflicts of intellectual class, "banality of evil" (as Hannah Arendt calls) and anti-heroes stuck in provincial stability, seeking for so-called "a better life elsewhere."
Regarding the visual narration of the movie, it is obvious that Ceylan has embraced a number of innovation on designing the visual aspects of the story; moving cameras, short-cuts for dialogue scenes etc. Nevertheless, the movie also preserves the beauty of Ceylan's well-known photographic cinema language.
Still, "Onca Upon A Time in Anatolia", among the works of N. B. Ceylan, is a cinematic top to me. And surely it is an extemely high bar for not only Turkish cinema. In this context, it may be asserted that "About Dry Grasses" could have easily been called a masterpiece if it belonged to any other director.
A 3.5 hour visual feast. Like Nuri Bilge Ceylan's previous films, this film, although quite long, contains plenty of dialogue that is not boring. Although the action part takes place in the countryside, there are visually fairy-tale environments. However, life is not easy at all in this deserted geography of Anatolia. The film greets the audience with snowy landscapes. In the beginning, we follow teacher Samet. Samet proceeds on the road surrounded by a white and endless horizon in the snow. This powerful scene provides clear clues about the film.
From the first moments of the film, director NBC establishes a fascinating and desolate atmosphere. It repeatedly tells us (as in the movie Winter Sleep) that loneliness is not only a result of external conditions, but also the result of our own emotional moves and selfish attitudes. Master cinematographer Gökhan Tiryaki did not take part in this movie, but the movie is still very successful. Cold colors and gray tones convey the isolation and depression of the characters in a balanced way. It allows us to feel the coldness on the characters' faces and the warmth of a glass of tea.
The deep scenario forces you to consider fundamental issues of the human condition in the context of good and evil, individualism and collectivism. NBC shows us that these dilemmas exist in all societies and force us to question our own beliefs and behaviors.
Again a Masterpiece!
(But USA's Oscars and the Golden Globe will again ignore the master director.)
From the first moments of the film, director NBC establishes a fascinating and desolate atmosphere. It repeatedly tells us (as in the movie Winter Sleep) that loneliness is not only a result of external conditions, but also the result of our own emotional moves and selfish attitudes. Master cinematographer Gökhan Tiryaki did not take part in this movie, but the movie is still very successful. Cold colors and gray tones convey the isolation and depression of the characters in a balanced way. It allows us to feel the coldness on the characters' faces and the warmth of a glass of tea.
The deep scenario forces you to consider fundamental issues of the human condition in the context of good and evil, individualism and collectivism. NBC shows us that these dilemmas exist in all societies and force us to question our own beliefs and behaviors.
Again a Masterpiece!
(But USA's Oscars and the Golden Globe will again ignore the master director.)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- About Dry Grasses
- Locaciones de filmación
- Nemrut, Adiyaman, Turquía(archeological site)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- EUR 3,500,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 118,955
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 14,651
- 25 feb 2024
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 2,305,695
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 3h 17min(197 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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