Rayting:
8.1/
10 6.3K votes
Language: Turkish
Release date: September 1984
When an incorruptible government pay clerk, who isn't taken seriously by anyone including his family, get robbed while carrying huge amount of work money, he becomes popular because people believe he faked the robbery and kept the money.
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User Reviews
Sener Sen has an excellent performance in this movie,especially at the part of the film after "ali riza" (sener sen) accepted that he stole the money himself.
it's really amazing to watch that how people behaviors to someone changes,after all of them think that "ali riza" stole much money from his company and then the neighbors,friends,relatives,workpals and even his wife and child started to change and be very nice and lovely to him after the robbery thing happened and they thought that the thief was "ali riza". "ali riza" didn't accept that he stole the money at first but after having so much appreciation that he never had before from the people,he decided to accept that he stole the money himself.
this movie really makes you re-think about people who are around you,and what are they looking for.maybe all of them are expecting something from you,which in that movie is "money".
Fmovies: 'Namuslu' is a word close to 'honest' and 'reliable' in English, and it is a word that sums up a man or a woman with integrity. It is not a bad or insulting word. Unlike a phrase like 'simple-minded' or 'innocent', it can't even be used in a condescending way in certain contexts in Turkish. Yet, it is generally used in this film as an insult against the protagonist. This is an early sign that the work is satirical. One of the complaints about 'globalization' is that it (whatever 'it' is) promotes the spread and domination of a human type that is dishonest, greedy, opportunistic, ruthless, etc. --even in cultures that had long managed to keep such people under social control. This, of course, is yet another complex issue that a simple word like globalization can't possibly cover. Although this film makes no reference to international influences on Turkish society, it represents a serious attack on a trend that gained momentum in the '80s and continued unabated to our day: The spread and legitimation of greed. The shock value of this dark comedy reaches its height in the personage of the mother-in-law of the protagonist, played by the veteran actress Adile Nasit. This venerable old lady who usually stands for respectable (and lovable) women appears to have completely bought this 'alien' greedy outlook, and fully expects the son-in-law to steal left and right. Lady Macbeth characters are not common to Turkish literature or movies. What is even less common is elderly people who are less than exemplary. (Stupid they may be, but evil?!) The arrival of a character like this is a clear signal that something is indeed rotten in Turkey. The plot and the comedy may not be insuperable. However, the film is a respectable effort, and holds a mirror to many people who are currently busy eroding one of the bases of a good economy anywhere: Trust. Those who are familiar with the centuries-old humor of Nasreddin Hoca will hopefully have a greater appreciation of the film.