The Third Page (1999) Poster

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6/10
The film which is dedicated to the losers.
volkanderinbay6 February 2000
Firstly, the film's name is `Üçüncü Sayfa' (not Ücgunzü Sayfa), means `third page', signifies `new start in life'. Zeki Demirkubuz is an independent director, and this film is directed and produced by him. This film is the story of people who has no leading role in life, people whose stories we don't usually want to know or listen, people who can't burst out laughing, people who is on the thin line separating life and death; and they are hesitant to have any hope neither from life nor death . This film is an honest film, which has no anxiety of neither rating nor money. There is no showy adventures or nothing which doesn't exist in ordinary life. Some of the scenes have Dostoyewsky's feeling of guilty analyzes. Some scenes tell about the backstage of Turkish movie. The real reason which makes me content, the scenes which are about the little worlds of little people. Zeki Demirkubuz is walking in the way he knows, and I'm very hopeful about Turkish (European) movie.
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8/10
Stark Portrayal of Life on İstanbul's Breadline
l_rawjalaurence5 October 2015
Structurally speaking ÜÇÜNCÜ SAYFA (THE THIRD PAGE) contains strong echoes of director Zeki Demirkubuz's previous film MASUMİYET (INNOCENCE) (1997) in its portrayal of a doomed love-affair between soap opera extra İsa (Ruhi Sarı) and his married neighbor Meryem (Başak Köklükaya). The story is a straightforward one: Meryem comes across İsa unconscious in his own apartment after İsa has murdered his landlord (Cengiz Seziçi) in cold blood. The two of them become close to one another; and their relationship strengthens once Meryem's husband Yaşar (Şemistan Kaya) comes home and starts beating her up. İsa and Meryem resolve to kill Yaşar in cold blood, but the plan doesn't go as either of them had foreseen.

The basic plot is set against a soap opera in which İsa plays several bit-parts, involving the heroic İbrahim (Bülent Düzgünoğlu). This is a cheap and cheerful production using a skeleton crew and a camera operator sitting in a wheelchair. A script girl reads out the dialogue that the actors simply repeat. None of the actors - except, perhaps, the leads - are professional; the production pays amateurs to fill the small roles to cut costs down. The device enables director Demirkubuz to make some trenchant points about the similarities - and more significantly, the differences - between life and art. Soap operas can be wrapped up at the end of each episode; human lives cannot. This is one of the destructive consequences of the mass media today, as it offers visions of perfection that few people can fulfill. Nonetheless people clamor to be involved in the soap, as witnessed on two occasions during the film where prospective actors are interviewed direct to camera about possible future prospects. They might not be qualified for the task, but at least they are cheap.

Yet Demirkubuz is not always so negative about the media and its consequences. On at least three occasions, including the end credits, we either see or hear sequences from classic Yeşilçam films. Their stories might be clichéd, their plots repetitive; but they have the power to shape people's lives in positive fashion, offering a vision of completeness that simply doesn't happen in real life. Sometimes art can tell us about life, especially where love- affairs are concerned. İsa understands the power of movies to affect his personal psychology, which explains why he has posters and photos of movies past and present plastered across his apartment walls, including a large color poster of an action thriller starring 70s tough guy Cüneyt Arkın. Although physically diminutive, İsa can at least imagine what a hero's life must be like.

By contrast the world of contemporary politics seems remote and uncaring. The film begins with a violent sequence in which İsa is beaten up by a gang-leader, having been unable to pay the $50 dollars İsa owes. On one of the room walls there is a picture of the then Prime Minister Tansu Çiller smiling at the camera. That image of perfection contrasts starkly with the violence taking place in the room. On another occasion President Süleyman Demirel is shown on television talking about an equal and just society in which everyone should have a voice; no one in the kıraathane listens to him as they gamble and subsequently fight with one another. In the underworld of İstanbul, politics simply has no meaning, especially as broadcast on the media.

The film ends with a dedication "To the defeated, to the forgotten," as well as to technical director Ajlan Altuğ. One thing is certain - after watching this powerful piece, we certainly cannot forget the lives of at least two defeated and forgotten protagonists.
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10/10
This movie deserves much more attention than it has been getting.
sstocker11 October 2001
`Third Page' is an excellent film, a sort of Turkish cross between Fritz Lang's `Scarlet Street' and Dostoevsky's `Crime and Punishment.' Its subject matter is very dark, alleviated only by occasional black humor. If well-made, depressing movies cheer you up, you should definitely check this one out.
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9/10
A reflection on people on the other side of life...powerful and worth seeing!
secilicel26 July 2007
I can surely say that this film is the most impressive of Zeki Demirkubuz's films ("Innocence" is also very good, though. Hard to make a decision between these two, I guess.).

Shortly, a young guy from the suburbs, without many expectations from life, struggles against all the hardships that come up "just" to survive, while life is constantly overwhelming him in the most brutal way, leaving no way out in the end, but suicide as there is no "third page" or let's say, no possibility of new beginnings in this context, where one is doomed to be in perpetual poverty, trouble and anguish.

Demirkubuz creates an excellent dramatic atmosphere, which is realistic in the sense that the film reflects another face of Turkish context (whether some like it or not, yeah, it is real. Nevertheless, it should not be generalized) through its strong main characters as well as its suburban background. Besides, it is obviously self-reflective in the shooting scenes of a Turkish TV series.

Of course, you will not find much nihilism or absurd-ism like in "Yazgi", and you are not supposed to. However, you will certainly find the sincere reflection of the lives of many "little" people living among us, mostly being unnoticed, and in a sense, it could be helpful to raise our awareness of people on the other side of life.
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9/10
Classic Demirkubuz
CactusHazretleri3 July 2008
Much like virtually all of the other major films by Zeki Demirkubuz, this movie explores in a realist style the depths of human suffering through betrayal, guilt, and lowliness. The general lack of a musical score and the incidental sounds such as the off-screen barking of dogs or the noise of moving furniture combine to really drive home the reality of such feelings, making the viewer feel as though this could be happening in their apartment building and in real life - rather than some sort of parallel film universe. The cinematography is deliberately a bit "shaky' at times. The film complements nicely others by Demirkubuz such as "Kader," "Masumiyet," and "Yazgi." It should go without saying that film is depressing and not for the faint of heart.
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