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An epic and rigorous tale of a night and day in a murder investigation, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia is a beautifully photographed crime drama about police and prosecutors locating a buried body through one long night in the Anatolian steppes. In the short prologue three men are drinking and talking. Then a convoy of cars is travelling around the countryside at night as one of the men seen earlier is trying to remember where a body was buried. After several false leads and a rest in a remote village, the body is finally discovered early the next morning. In the course of the long investigation the characters and hidden thoughts of the main protagonists are gradually themselves exhumed.
- New Wave Films
- 157 mins approx.
- Nuri Bilge Ceylan
- 15
- Muhammet Uzuner
- Yilmaz Erdogan
- Taner Birsel
English
- Turkish
- 1
- 2
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Region 2 DVD (may not be viewable outside Europe).
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An epic and rigorous tale of a night and day in a murder investigation, Once Upon a Time in Anatolia is a beautifully photographed crime drama about police and prosecutors locating a buried body through one long night in the Anatolian steppes. In the short prologue three men are drinking and talking. Then a convoy of cars is travelling around the countryside at night as one of the men seen earlier is trying to remember where a body was buried. After several false leads and a rest in a remote village, the body is finally discovered early the next morning. In the course of the long investigation the characters and hidden thoughts of the main protagonists are gradually themselves exhumed.
- New Wave Films
- 157 mins approx.
- Nuri Bilge Ceylan
- 15
- Muhammet Uzuner
- Yilmaz Erdogan
- Taner Birsel
English
- Turkish
- 1
- 2
Customer Reviews
Top Customer Reviews
Customer reviews are independent and do not represent the views of Zavvi.
Not to be missed!
In one word, this a marvellous film which should not be missed! The scenery and the images are fantastic. The journey motif makes it the lives that cross one another familiar. And the acting! It totally blew my mind! It seems as if the director is really relating the story of a group of people without ever making his presence felt. It does not feel like you are watching a film at all but from the very first moment you are taken in by the film.
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