Almanya Willkommen In Deutschland Kostenloses

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Filme Drama Almanya - Willkommen in Deutschland. Almanya – Willkommen in Deutschland ist ein deutscher Spielfilm aus dem. Als einer von drei deutschen Filmen wurde Almanya in die Liste der 45 Filme aufgenommen. Almanya - Willkommen in Deutschland. Almanya - Willkommen in Deutschland film stream german online. Almanya – Willkommen in Deutschland Film Trailer Kritik Leyla young Petra Schmidt-Schaller Deutschlwnd ist eine Seite von eine Geschichte Deutschlands die kaum bekannt ist. Edit Storyline The story of three generations of a Turkish immigrant family.

Almanya: Welcome to Germany
Directed byYasemin Şamdereli
Produced by
  • Annie Brunner
  • Andreas Richter
  • Ursula Woerner
Written by
Starring
  • Rafael Koussouris
  • Ercan Karacayli
CinematographyThe Chau Ngo
Distributed byConcorde Filmverleih (Germany)
  • 12 February 2011 (Berlin Film Festival)
  • 10 March 2011 (Germany)
101 minutes
CountryGermany
Language
  • German
  • Turkish
Budget4 million Euro

Almanya: Welcome to Germany (German: Almanya – Willkommen in Deutschland) (Almanya is Turkish for Germany) is a 2011 German comedy film directed by Yasemin Şamdereli.[1][2] The film premiered at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival in the section competition and won the Deutscher Filmpreis 2011 in the categories Best Script and Best Film.

The tragic comedy dramatizes the question of identity and belonging for former Turkish guest workers in Germany and their descendants. The film opened in German cinemas on 10 March and was the fourth most successful German film of 2011 with 1.5 million viewers.

Cast[edit]

  • Aylin Tezel as Canan
  • Vedat Erincin as Hüseyin
  • Fahri Ögün Yardim as Hüseyin (young)
  • Lilay Huser as Fatma
  • Demet Gül as Fatma (young)
  • Aykut Kayacik as Veli
  • Aycan Vardar as Veli (young)
  • Ercan Karacayli as Muhamed
  • Kaan Aydogdu as Muhamed (young)
  • Şiir Eloğlu as Leyla
  • Aliya Artuc as Leyla (young)
  • Petra Schmidt-Schaller as Gabi
  • Denis Moschitto as Ali
  • Axel Milberg as a German official
  • Tim Seyfi as a vegetable trader
  • Aglaia Szyszkowitz as a doctor
  • Katharina Thalbach as a woman in the subway
  • Saskia Vester as a neighbour

Plot[edit]

Six year-old Cenk Yılmaz begins to question his identity in his German school one day when he isn't chosen for either the German or the Turkish soccer team. He is the son of Ali, of Turkish heritage, and his German wife, Gabi, and Cenk cannot speak Turkish. At a family meal his Grandmother Fatma declares to the family her newly acquired German citizenship. At the same meal, Grandfather Hüseyin tells the family that he has bought a house in Turkey that he wants to use as a summer home. In order to renovate the house, he wants to travel to Turkey with the whole family.

Cenk's 22-year-old cousin Canan is pregnant with the child of her British boyfriend David but she has not told the family yet. She begins to tell Cenk the story of how their Grandfather came to Germany in the 1960s as the 1,000,001st guest worker to help fill the worker shortage. She explains how Grandfather Hüseyin brought his family to Germany afterward, the dreams and worries that they brought with them, and the difficulties they faced.

Together, the family flies to Turkey where they rent a bus to drive to their old hometown in East Anatolya to see their new house. Hüseyin guesses that Canan is pregnant and reacts with understanding. Hüseyin receives an invitation to give a speech at an official thank-you ceremony for guest workers at Bellevue Palace. After driving further, Hüseyin suddenly dies and since he recently received German citizenship, Turkish authorities refuse to allow him to be buried in a Muslim cemetery. Instead, the family brings his body to his old hometown and they bury him there. Cenk sees all the generations of his family in their various ages collected around the grave.

The house bought by Hüseyin turns out to be a ruin. His son, Muhamed, decides to stay in Turkey to rebuild it, since he is unemployed in Germany. The rest of the family returns to Germany. Cenk gives the speech that Hüseyin prepared in front of Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Awards[edit]

  • 2011 German Film Award Deutscher Filmpreis for Best Script in Gold and Best Film in Silver

References[edit]

  1. ^Smith, Ian Hayden (2012). International Film Guide 2012. p. 125. ISBN978-1-908215-01-7.
  2. ^'Almanya – Welcome to Germany'. calgaryfilm. Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 3 May 2012.

External links[edit]

  • Almanya: Welcome to Germany on IMDb
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Almanya:_Welcome_to_Germany&oldid=929675987'
Competition (out of competition)

Almanya

  • Stills
  • Pictures
  • PRESS CONFERENCE
  • RED CARPET

Andreas Richter (Producer)

Demet Gül (Actress)

Fahri Yardim (Actor)

Nesrin Samdereli (Script)

Yasemin Samdereli (Director)

Lilay Huser (Actress)

Vedat Erincin (Actor)

Download lagu metallica gudang lagu. Aylin Tezel (Actress)

Andreas Richter (Producer)

Demet Gül (Actress)

Fahri Yardim (Actor)

Nesrin Samdereli (Script)

Yasemin Samdereli (Director)

Lilay Huser (Actress)

Vedat Erincin (Actor)

Aylin Tezel (Actress)

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On 10 September, 1964, Germany’s one-millionth ‘guest worker’ was welcomed. Spanning a period of no less than forty-five years, this film by sisters Yasemin Samdereli (director) and Nesrin Samdereli (screenplay) tells the story of guest worker number one-million-and-one – a man named Hüseyin Yilmaz and his family.
‘Who or what am I – German or Turk?’ asks six-year-old Cenk Yilmaz when neither his Turkish nor his German schoolmates pick him for their respective football teams. In an attempt to comfort Cenk, his 22-year-old cousin Canan tells him the story of their grandfather Hüseyin, who came to Germany at the end of the sixties as a ‘guest worker’ and who later brought his wife and children to ‘Almanya’. Germany had long since become the family’s home when without warning one night, Hüseyin surprises his loved ones with the news that he has bough a house in Turkey and now wants to return to the old country. Refusing to brook the slightest opposition, the entire family set off for Turkey. This marks the beginning of a journey full of memories, arguments and reconciliations – until, that is, the family trip takes an unexpected turn …
The young filmmakers have plundered their own memories of childhood and youth for this, their cinematic debut. Yasemin Samdereli: “Even at an early age, we were always struck by the way people found it amusing whenever we told them stories about our childhood: that Nesrin for instance once played German carnival figure ‘Funkenmariechen’ and used to belt out Catholic hymns fervently during mass. Or that I used to play the flute in a marching band and wrote my name Jasmin – until my second grade teacher torpedoed my attempts to hoodwink her.”

Germany 2010, 97 min

by

Yasemin Samdereli

with

Vedat Erincin
Fahri Yardim
Aylin Tezel
Lilay Huser
Demet Gül
Denis Moschitto
Petra Schmidt-Schaller

World Sales

Beta Cinema GmbH