The Bandit

Reviews
badelf
Eskiya is like the Göbekli Tepe, an important, neolithic archaeological discovery in Turkey, unearthed from the depths of cinematic history. It has a value not just because of its age, but because it carries the weight of immutable truth. The digital version’s occasional uneven color grading, perhaps a casualty of its transition from celluloid, does little to dim its luster. This is otherwise a perfect movie, and the reasons why become lucid in retrospect. I normally like to delve into meaning first, but here, there are technical honors at the forefront. The cinematography is a masterclass in using the classic rules of film to turn Anatolia’s expansive beauty into something mythic. Ertunç Şenkay doesn’t just frame the landscape; he lets it breathe, deploying wide lenses to swallow the horizon whole and tight close-ups to reveal a lifetime in the face of his subjects. The land itself is vast and indifferent, or perhaps it’s not indifferent, watching as human dramas unfold beneath its ancient sky, as they always have. This is cinematography that doesn’t merely serve the story, it elevates it like the peak of an Anatolian mountain But the real marvel is Yavuz Turgul’s narrative: a Tolstoyan-sized epic compressed into 120 minutes without losing a nuance. The script is tight, relentless, and utterly unpredictable, moving with the precision of a river that has cut stone deeply over centuries. There’s no wasted motion here, no unnecessary detours. Every subplot, every shift in tone feels inevitable, as if the story has always existed and Turgul simply found the perfect way to tell it. It is rich, multi-faceted, and deep. Two themes rise above the rest, for me at least. The first is the elegy for “honor among thieves,” a concept that feels almost quaint in its nobility. Turgul isn’t just nostalgic; he’s mournful, painting a world where criminals had rules, and betrayal was a huge offense. The film’s real villains aren’t just greedy, they’re modern products of a system where loyalty is a liability and capitalism has rotted everything it touches. Turgul’s political critique is subtle but devastating, a quiet indictment of a world where power corrupts absolutely and money buys everything, or at least the illusion of it. Berfo’s fate is a masterstroke: a man who thought he could purchase affection, only to learn too late that some things cannot be owned. The fact that this was made in 1996—long before the current era of late-stage capitalism’s grotesqueries makes it feel eerily prescient. And then there’s the love. Oh, the LOVE. Eskiya isn’t just a crime saga or a political allegory; it’s a story about the heart in all its forms: eternal, paternal, doomed, deluded. Baran and Keje’s bond is the kind of love that survives time and betrayal, a quiet fire that never quite goes out. Baran and Cumali’s relationship is father-son in the truest sense. It’s not just blood, but choice, the kind of love that is strong and demands sacrifice. Keje and Berfo’s tragic mismatch proves money can’t buy what matters. Emel and Cumali’s doomed romance is a cautionary tale about trust. Emel and Andref’s twisted partnership shows how like attracts like in the worst ways. And then there’s Emel’s mother, another victim of Andref’s manipulations, a reminder that some people leave wreckage wherever they go. At the center of it all is Şener Şen as Baran, a performance of such Buddha-like resolve that it feels sacred. He’s a man who has buried his sins and now seeks redemption, not for reward, but because it’s the only path left that makes sense. His Baran is tragic not because he fails, but because the world isn’t ready for men like him. Sen’s performance begs the question that lingers, heavy and unanswered: Who among us mortals could wear the sandals of Christ? By the end, Eskiya doesn’t just touch you, it transforms you. This is a story that burns like a slow ember after the credits roll. It’s a film that understands the cost of honor, the fragility of love, and the price of trying to be good in a world that rewards the opposite. If you’re a cinephile, this isn’t just a must-see-before-you-die, it’s a revelation.
Movie Recommendation
Hunting Season2010-12-02Veteran homicide cop Fermanand his hot-headed partner İdris team up with rookie cop and anthropology major Hasan to investigate the murder of a young woman. The suspects include her conservative family, who might have killed her for honor, her drug-dealing boyfriend and aged billionaire Battal who had taken the victim as his second wife.More...
Valley of the Wolves: Palestine2011-01-27After the Freedom Flotilla attempts to bring humanitarian assistance to Gaza refuses to turn back, it is attacked by the Israeli military. In a dramatic battle scene, activists resist and are killed by the Israeli soldiers. A Turkish commando team led by Polat Alemdar (Necati Şaşmaz) travels to West Bank in Palestine, where they launch a campaign against Israeli military personnel in an attempt to track down and eliminate an Israeli general, leader Moşe Ben Eliyezer (Erdal Beşikçioğlu), who is the responsible for the flotilla raid.More...
Gallipoli: End of the Road2013-03-15Corporal Muhsin is a sharp shooter who previously fought in the Balkan War. When mobilization is declared again, he joins the war alongside his brother Hasan. The two brothers support each other in the fight against the enemy.More...
Satan1974-01-0112 year-old Gul becomes possessed by Satan after experimenting with a Ouija board. A troubled psychiatrist and an experienced exorcist become the girl’s only hope for salvation.More...
Last Stop: Kurtuluş2012-01-06Meet Vartanus who has devoted her life to her bedridden father; Goncagul who realizes that her Mafioso lover will never marry her. Gulnur who's resigned herself to daily beatings as long as her husband doesn't touch the kids, Tulay who's shattered every time her mother gets beaten; hairdresser Fusun who tends to see things on the bright side. These are the women who transport Eylem, each other and perhaps every woman in the country to Last Stop: Kurtulus. The heroines adopt one unwavering principle: to oppose all forms of violence! A dark comedy that's rose-tinted, provocative and fantastic...More...
Fork in the Road2017-11-10He is a boss who dedicates his life to grow up the textile empire he inherited from his father and does not hesitate to follow ruthless methods for it. He decides to choose a different life after a heavy traffic accident.More...
Abuzer Kadayıf2000-09-29After his pregnant wife killed by thinner addicts, Ersin Balkan, decides on to establish a school for children who are abandoned ad thinner addicts. Noticing that he can not afford a such thing with his salary, takes a new career and becomes a singer.More...
Sewage2009-11-05Imdat is a poor, uneducated, working class window cleaner who has migrated to the big city. As he cleans the windows of the private TV channel Kanal I, the president of the channel, Berk, discovers that Imdat has an uncanny ability to sense what program will yield the best ratings and what is likely to be panned by audiences, thus Berk begins milking Imdat's unique ability to score ratings. Soon Imdat finds himself replacing the president and leading the TV channel. He goes on to produce some truly tasteless and exploitative programs that enjoy massive ratings, eventually becoming part of the dirty media games himself.More...
Lovelorn2005-01-07A retired teacher who returns to Istanbul after years away, Nazim tries to reacquaint himself with his hometown, which has changed significantly. While waiting for his pension to begin, Nazim takes a temporary job as a taxi driver and frequently ends up in the seedier parts of the city. …More...
Ata Demirer Gazinosu2020-12-31Demirer performs stand-up comedy and acts as a "one-man cabaret"! The successful comedian has a wide repertoire ranging from Turkish classical music to opera, folk music to pop and arabesque. Demirer is accompanied on stage by an orchestra conducted by Taşkın Sabah and, from time to time, dancers. The humor-filled stories that the audience eagerly awaits also take their place on stage between songs. Ata Demirer, with his unique style, both makes the audience laugh with his jokes and brings a pleasant sound to the theater stage with his songs.More...
Expat Şaban1985-10-01Şaban is a poor man. In Germany, where Şaban went as a worker, tragicomic events happen.More...
Arabesque1989-02-01Sener and Müjde, who can never come together because of endless obstacles and misunderstandings, slowly drift into the plaintive world of arabesque music.More...
The King of the Street Cleaners1977-08-09Going through his daily routine in a stereotypical neighborhood, a street cleaner falls in love with a charwoman. Unfortunately for him, so does his superior officer.More...
More2017-07-03Gaza is a 14-year-old boy who lives on the Aegean coast of Turkey. Together with his domineering father, he helps smuggle refugees from war-torn countries to Europe, giving them temporary lodgings and scant food until they attempt the crossing. Gaza dreams of escaping this life, but can't help being drawn into a dark world of immorality, exploitation and human suffering. Can you avoid becoming a monster when you've been raised by one? Onur Saylak's debut feature, adapted from the award-winning novel of the same title by Hakan Günday, one of the first novels to document the refugee crisis in Europe, "More" is the gripping story of a boy that gets to grow up in a world where there's no room for innocence.More...
The Edge of Heaven2007-09-27The lives of six German-Turkish immigrants are drawn together by circumstance: An old man and a prostitute forging a partnership, a young scholar reconciling his past, two young women falling in love, and a mother putting the shattered pieces of her life back together.More...
Carmina or Blow Up2012-07-05Carmina, 58, runs a shop selling Iberian products in Seville. After several robberies and no help from her insurance company, she comes up with a way to recover the money she needs to keep her family. While she waits in her kitchen for her plan to kick in, she thinks back over her life, her work and her miracles.More...
The Road1982-09-01When five Kurdish prisoners are granted one week's home leave, they find to their dismay that they face continued oppression outside of prison from their families, the culture, and the government.More...
On Board1998-12-04Sailors want to remain in their small world, which is warm and cozy and full of lies, but their routine life turns upside down when one of them gets mugged and badly beaten.More...
Everything's Gonna Be Great1998-11-27When Altan swipes prescription drugs from his brother Nuri's pharmacy, they soon find themselves on a dangerous but funny road trip to get rid of the stuff and escape the mafiosi Altan tried to double-cross. Along the way, the brother who are compete opposites finally bond.More...
Losers' Club2011-03-25Kaan and Mete, co-hosts of a mid 1990s radio show called Kaybedenler Kulübü (Losers' Club), struggle to deal with their daily lives after their show becomes an instant hit. Kaan meets Zeynep, the girl of his dreams, but their relationship comes under pressure as the show continues to stir controversy and attract fans from every segment of Istanbul society.More...