MovieChat Forums > Midnight Express (1978) Discussion > Accurate depiction of Turks and Turkish ...

Accurate depiction of Turks and Turkish prisons


Dont believe it go asks kurds who were tortured in turkish prisons or the greek and armenians who's heads were chopped off and used to play fotball with by turks.

reply

Yes, it's very real just like the prison in Tango and Cash. This movie should be called documentary.

reply

I'm a Kurd and have not heard a Kurd got beat up in a Turkish prison. I asked some of my elders that went to prison (old days, old way of living) and they also confirmed not being beheaded.

reply

couldn't you confirm it yourself just by looking at their heads, if there had been a previous beheading?

reply

Its possible they might not be telling the truth.

reply

I can confirm 100% that there head is still connected to the rest of their body on the place where you would expect.

(i see now that my grammar is terrible, love the replies i got for my post ;) )

reply

The Kurds have very advanced head-reconnection surgery. Once the neck heals, the scar is barely visible.

reply

But turkey is the biggest craphole

reply

*Accurate depiction of Turkish mentality and so called "Civilization" this movie is a gem one of the best movies ever made...with immense BALLS

reply

They did have immense balls. Columbia Picture hated the movie and were not going to release it until it showed at Cannes (itself a huge risk) and got a standing O from 2000 attendees. They were demied filming in at least five European countries due to Turkish influence which included Turkish government-organized demonstrations in every major city where it played. Director Alan Parker said he didn’t care and would not budge on anything, though various governments like Holland caved to the pressure and removed all dialogue insulting Turks, no doubt including Hayes’ shocking courtroom sp

reply

They did have immense balls. Columbia Picture hated the movie and were not going to release it until it showed at Cannes (itself a huge risk). Despite being one of the most violent films ever shown there, it got a standing O from 2000 attendees. They were demied filming in at least five European countries due to Turkish influence which included Turkish government-organized demonstrations in every major city where it played. Director Alan Parker said he didn’t care and would not budge on anything, though various governments like Holland caved to the pressure and removed all dialogue insulting Turks, no doubt including Hayes’ shocking courtroom speech calling it a country of pigs. Critics and politicians worldwide screamed RACIST … just like today. And just like today, it all failed. The film ran so long in Spain — three years — the government passed a law limiting a film run to no more than a year. Having been passed from generation to generation through the magic of home video, the movie is still a cultural phenomenon in Turkey, the US, and elsewhere — for better or worse. One Turkish government worker compared it to The Wizard of Oz — another film that won’t go away.

reply

The whole movie was anti-Turkish propaganda.

reply

[deleted]

[deleted]

I've only known one Turkish person, and she was not nice, by any standards. But I'm holding back my judgment of the other millions, based on this single example.

reply