A woman let's a harmless looking fortune teller into her house. The fortune teller is clearly gifted, but it turns out she had no intention of just telling fortunes... and soon the woman deeply regrets letting her in. It's a psychological drama - with some Turkish style comedy moments - in which nobody is what he/she seems to be. The name Nar/Pomegranate refers to the pomegranate as the forbidden fruit that Eve eats in the Garden of Eden (according to the Quran, like the apple in the Cristian tradition) and symbolizes sin or earthly pleasure. I give the movie a 7+, because the story has some good, unexpected turns. It's definitely worth watching if you like Turkish cinema.
4 Reviews
It's a beautiful movie shot in one studio
Amarcord0610 February 2018
Started well, ended badly
olcayozfirat21 January 2023
Turkish thriller film produced in 2011. The movie starts off nice and interesting, then the motive comes up and the interest and mystery fades. After that, the movie turns from thriller to normal drama. Even this way, when you say it's not bad, it comes to a disastrous end. In other words, the director neither thought nor made an irrelevant ending to the movie, or what was needed.
A woman comes to a woman named Doctor Sema, saying that she is a fortune teller. She says she made an appointment for fortune telling. The woman has some special abilities. While he says some things about the woman he's looking at, he actually has other plans. There is a traumatizing incident between the woman and her daughter.
There are no normal relationships in Serra Yilmaz's films either. Either female to female or male to male.
There is no sex or nudity in the movie.
A woman comes to a woman named Doctor Sema, saying that she is a fortune teller. She says she made an appointment for fortune telling. The woman has some special abilities. While he says some things about the woman he's looking at, he actually has other plans. There is a traumatizing incident between the woman and her daughter.
There are no normal relationships in Serra Yilmaz's films either. Either female to female or male to male.
There is no sex or nudity in the movie.
Not good. Not good at all.
beyoglu2 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
**warning contains spoilers** This film didn't make a whole lot of sense. It starts with a woman taking a long journey by bus to see a woman, a doctor. The doorman of the apartment building stops her on the way in asking her questions. She says she has an appointment. We learn that she's a fortune-teller and has come to tell Doctor Sema's fortune. She arrives at Sema's apartment and Sema shows her in. The fortune-teller makes coffee (Turkish coffee, commonly used to fortune-telling) and they sit and begin the session. Thrity minutes pass before any sort of action kicks in (the inciting action). It later transpires that the woman lost her granddaughter at Sema's hospital. It's only then, halfway though the movie that the doctor says she isn't Sema, but Sema's girlfriend Deniz. After a long standoff involving drugs and a gun, the real Sema arrives and the story is generally resolved. Probably most confusing in this film, and most unsatisfying is the end, in which we see the opening sequence again, shot for shot, but this time it's Deniz playing the role of the fortune-teller, making the long bus journey, being stopped by the doorman, and finally getting to the door, which is answered by the fortune-teller, this time in the role of Sema (really Deniz). That was a truly bizarre turn for the filmmakers to make and made an already dime-a-dozen story into something sub par. In Turkey, we've had a wave of films that are made by people who fancy themselves as theater impresarios and stage their films like bad dramas. Long scenes in one room between a few characters. But the story doesn't support their melodramatic approach. Without anything to kick off the story before the 30 minute mark, I wasn't able to anchor myself into this film and stay interested.
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