SPECIAL MENTION
THE APPLE
Sêv
November 25 - December 6, 2024

Short | 15 min. | 2023 | with English subtitles
Directed by Mehmet Acaruk
Cast: Nur Sürer, Dilan Düzgüner
Zerya is a refugee woman in her 50s living in Paris. When she was only 22 years old, she had to leave her country because of the chemical gas thrown into the city of Halabja by Saddam Hussein on March 16, 1988. She has lived in France for 30 years. Visiting a painting exhibition in Paris, Zerya said, "This is not an apple," from Magritte's Betrayal of Images series. This painting reveals Zerya's past traumas. Zerya establishes both a historical and aesthetic relationship between the "apple with cloves", which expresses love in Kurdish mythology, the smell of apples in the gas used in the massacre, and Magritte's painting. She expresses the relationship of the painting with its own tragedy in a different performance.
Selected Festivals and Awards Kraljevski Film Festival, Serbia (2023): Special Jury Prize
Uşak International Film Festival, Türkiye (2023): Best Music
Istanbul International Spring Film Festival, Türkiye (2023): Best Short Film, Best Director
Berlin Kurdish Film Festival, Germany (2023): Best Young Director
Siirt International Short Film Festival, Türkiye (2023): Lineer Group Special Prize
Acoolade Film Festival, USA (2023): Special Mention
İzmir International Film Festival, Türkiye (2023): Special Selection
Kıssadan Hisse Film Festival, Istanbul, Türkiye (2023): Special Selection
|
Mehmet ACARUK
Mehmet Acaruk has been a professional photographer for nearly a decade. He spent many years working at Iz Magazine under the guidance of Ara Güler, a renowned photographer in Turkey and internationally. Acaruk also played key roles in the Fotoğrafevi, the Turkish representative of Magnum Photos, a renowned photography cooperative. Inspired by the storytelling power of photography, Acaruk transitioned to filmmaking. His sociological perspective is evident in all his works. Believing in the importance of aesthetic integrity in all artistic and social endeavors, Acaruk draws motivation for his filmmaking from this belief. “The Apple” is his first short film.
|
|