My crazy Turkish wedding
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | My crazy Turkish wedding |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 2006 |
length | 94 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 12 |
Rod | |
Director | Stefan Holtz |
script | Daniel Bacon |
production |
Christian Becker , Anita Schneider |
music | Rainer Kühn |
camera | Bernhard Jasper |
cut | Georg Soering |
occupation | |
|
My Crazy Turkish Wedding is a feature film from 2006. The comedy, which according to one of its awards was the “Best German TV Film of 2006”, is set in Berlin.
action
Götz, the owner of a Kreuzberg record shop, falls in love with Aylin, who has already been promised to the Turkish doctor Tarkan. Götz and Aylin love each other and want to get married. Her plans initially met with neither the future Turkish parents- in-law nor the soon-to-be mother-in-law Helena. Götz converts to Islam and tries to become a real Turk so that he can finally marry Aylin. After numerous entanglements and problems, small crises and unexpected twists and turns, the two of them finally find each other and can get married.
background
The film was created as an in-house production by ProSieben (“made by ProSieben”, “ProSieben Premiere”) and is advertised there as a TV movie and romantic comedy . The film was broadcast for the first time on March 30, 2006 on ProSieben.
Aylin's father Süleyman is played by Hilmi Sözer , probably the most famous film comedian of Turkish origin in German cinema since he played Tom Gerhardt's friend Mario in Ralf Huettner's comedy Voll normaaal in 1994 .
The film is partly inspired by the American-Canadian movie My Big Fat Greek Wedding from 2002, parallels are obvious.
Reviews
"Solidly staged romantic (television) comedy based on common patterns."
Awards
The film was nominated for the 2006 German Television Award as Best TV Movie , for Best Book and Best Cinematography . Georg Soering received the award for the best cut .
At the Baden-Baden TV Film Festival in 2006, Meine Verrückte Türkische Hochzeit received both the main prize of the German Academy of Performing Arts (as the first production by a private television broadcaster) and the 3sat audience award , and was able to prevail against films as much as Wut .
In 2007 the film was awarded the Grimme Prize in the “Fiction” category. Daniel Speck received the Bavarian TV Prize 2007 for the script .
See also
Web links
- My crazy Turkish wedding in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- My crazy Turkish wedding at filmportal.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ My crazy Turkish wedding. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed January 9, 2017 .