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Mankurt (film)
1990 Soviet film directed by Hojaguly Narliyev From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mankurt (Russian: Манкурт; Turkish: Gün Uzar Yüzyıl Olur)[1] is a 1990 Soviet film written by Mariya Urmadova[2] and directed by Hojaguly Narliyev.[3] The main cast were the Turkish actors Tarık Tarcan and Yılmaz Duru and the Turkmen actors Maya-Gozel Aymedova and Hojadurdy Narliyev.[4][5][6][7][8][9]
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Background
The film was partially filmed on location in Syria and in Turkey, representing a Turkish-Soviet cooperation in filmmaking.[10] The film is based on the fictional legend about a mankurt within the novel The Day Lasts More Than a Hundred Years ("И дольше века длится день") by Chinghiz Aitmatov,[11] a philosophical tale about what can happen to people if they forget their motherland, language, and history.[3] The Turkic legend invented by Aitmatov for the novel conceives of a cruel way of making mankurts of captives in the hopes that they will forget everything but basic activities, rendering them servile minions to Zunghar conquerors.
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Synopsis
The film is about a Turkmen who defended his homeland from invasion. He is captured, tortured, and brainwashed into serving his homeland's conquerors. He is so completely turned that he does not recognize his mother and kills her when she attempts to return his memories.
Cast
- Maya-Gozel Aimedova
- Nurberdi Allaberdiyev
- Maysa Almazova
- Baba Annanov
- Kerim Annanov
- Yılmaz Duru
- Altyn Hojayeva
- Hommat Myllyk
- Hojadurdy Narliyev
- Tahyr Narliyev
- Mergen Niyazov
- Maya Nuryagdiyeva
- Sapar Odayev
- Tarık Tarcan
See also
References
External links
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