Yol, 1982
[The Road]
At
a "half-open" detention facility and work camp on the island of Imrali,
a group of hopeful, but resigned men ritualistically converge on
the entrance of the main penitentiary ward: first, for the disbursement
of weekly mail and subsequently, for the eagerly anticipated posting
of the list of prisoners authorized for a one-week furlough. A
soft-spoken, unassuming man named Yusuf (Tuncay Akça), dispirited
by the scarcity of letters from home, seemingly finds his fortune
changed when he finds his name among the privileged list of furloughed
prisoners. Mehmet (Halil Ergün), a pensive and conflicted
man faces his trip to Diyarbakir with great trepidation and anxiety,
having found his marriage increasingly strained when his wife begins
to question his role in her brother's death during a bungled robbery.
A vibrant and self-assured young man, Mevlat (Hikmet Çelik),
finds his romantic notions to reunite with his fiancée Meral
(Sevda Aktolga) thwarted when her family dispatches chaperones
in order to prevent the couple from being alone. An idealistic
and apolitical man named Omer (Necmettin Çobanoglu) who
daydreams of his idyllic life amid the lush, grazing open fields
of his beloved village in Kurdistan returns home to the chaotic
sight of his town under siege by the military as they attempt to
root out suspected insurgents in the closely knit community. A
rugged, unemotional prisoner named Seyit (Tarik Akan) receives
a letter from his family explaining that his wife Ziné (Serif
Sezer) had dishonored their clan by resorting to prostitution,
and was sent with their son to her parents' home at a mountain
village in the frozen hinterlands. Now issued a temporary permit
to return home, he vows to redress the shame of his wife's infidelity
and restore honor to both families.
Realized on film by Yilmaz Güney's assistant director Serif
Gören based on the screenplay by - and technical direction of
- imprisoned political prisoner, author, actor, and filmmaker Güney,
Yol is an elegantly spare, haunting, and socially relevant portrait
of repression, tyranny, isolation, and inhumanity. By juxtaposing images
of transnational public transportation (in particular, trains and rural
buses) and varied landscape that characterize the disparate paths of
the furloughed prisoners, Güney illustrates, not only the country's
innate cultural and ethnographic diversity, but more importantly, the
universality of oppression and the erosive, incalculable toll of Turkey's
continuing political and socio-economic instability following the military
coup of 1960 and subsequent military interventions of 1971 and 1980.
Moreover, through repeated episodes of martial law curfews, random
check points and inspections, and civilian searches, Güney draws
an implicit parallel in the paradoxical status of the conditionally
liberated prisoners with the broader depiction of curtailed personal
freedom among the general population under the nation's military rule.
Inevitably, the sad, often tragic plight of the prisoners' elusive
search for a sense of normalcy serves, not only as a microcosmic representation
of life under political instability and a repressive regime, but also
as a distilled and elementally human contemporary document of desolation,
struggle, compassion, and perseverance.
© Acquarello 2004. All rights
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