(Reuters) -
Turkish director Nuri Bilge Ceylan says his film "Winter Sleep" dealing
with the huge divide between rich and poor, the powerful and the
powerless in modern day Turkey is not based on current events, but is meant to teach his country a lesson. Ceylan's film lasting
three hours and 16 minutes has received some of the best reviews of any
film shown so far at Cannes, with the French newspaper Le Monde calling
it "magnificent". Despite
its setting in the vast Anatolian steppe, the atmosphere is almost
claustrophobic as it shows a rich man and former actor named Aydin
(Haluk Bilginer) who uses his intellect and position to bully his
tenants and beat his wife and sister into intellectual submission. But
Ceylan said his portrayal of abuse of power - by a man obsessed with
his own pride - is based on tales from Chekhov, and was not inspired by
recent events in Istanbul where people rioted over the planned
development of a popular city square. "Of course Turkey
is a country where there are many problems ... every day you come up
with another big issue. The artist doesn't have a lack of subject
matter," Ceylan told Reuters on Saturday, the day after the premiere of
his film. "In this climate
some directors or writers like to deal directly with these problems and
some of them deal with that indirectly. I personally don't like very
much to deal with the social matters but what I deal with are the inner
worlds of the people." What
he does hope is that this film, among the favorites to win the Cannes
Film Festival's top Palme d'Or prize, will teach his countrymen a sense
of shame, and responsibility. In
Turkey, he said, "there is a lack of this, the culture of confession
and also and the potential of shame ... For instance, in Japan if there's a big accident the minister takes personal responsibility. "I think as an artist I should develop these kinds of humanistic and individualistic properties." NO SHORT CUTS Ceylan,
who has made more than a half dozen films and won a best director prize
at Cannes in 2008 for "Three Monkeys", said he used to indulge his love
of film as a young man when he worked as a waiter in London's
rough-and-tumble Brixton area. Waitering in the evening, he would go to a cinema near the King's Cross railway station during the day. "I don't think it's there now, but I used to watch two or three films a day," he said. So
he is perfectly aware that a film running more than three hours is not
the cinematic norm, but "Winter Sleep" is full of so many references, to
Shakespeare, to religion, to music, and to showing the evolving
inter-relationships among his characters, that he couldn't make it
shorter. "It was
four-and-a-half hours at the beginning so I cut until this but I
couldn't cut it further because everything is connected to each other,"
he said. He also said the
haunting passages from Schubert's A major piano sonata played by pianist
Alfred Brendel that recur throughout the movie were not his first
choice for the film, but they fit the way the film works. "I didn't want it because it's so famous but it was suitable," he said. "In
a short time it creates an effect and also the piece has many
variations in itself ... you don't have to use always the same parts,
there are many parts which are similar but still different. That was
it." (Reporting by Michael Roddy; Editing by Sophie Hares)
Turkish Director Ceylan: 'I deal with inner worlds'

Reuters
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