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This is a very interesting movie, and it can be said actually that its real target is not Turkey but Germany. Turkey is shown as a weak country, which is deceived by the real devil, Germany. On the other hand Russia is strong, has superior morality and civilization. It can even be said that what the movie aims at is to convey a message to the Turks telling them that it is the Russians who are they real friends (and who should be their allies) and not the Germans. |
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In the movie “Turkish Espionage: The War and the Woman” (Turetskii spionazh: voina i zhenshschina / Туретскии спионаж: воина и женшчина), released by Libken in 1915, a young French girl who has learned to fly a plane falls in love with a Serbian pilot. She joins the International Red Cross so that she can be close to him, and she is sent to a Turkish hospital. She takes care of a wounded Turkish officer, who happens to be a friend of the man she loves. As the Turkish officer is lying in his bed unconsciously, she searches his pockets and finds the plans for a major Turkish offensive! She tries to run away, but fails in her attempt and lands in a Turkish dungeon. She tries once again, this time wearing the uniform of a fallen Turkish officer, whose documents she uses to get through the lines and to commandeer a Turkish airplane. She flies over the frontline, arrives in Serbian positions and informs them about the coming attack. Serbia manages to repel the Turkish attack and young lovers get married. This movie shows how technology and modern woman win over the not-so-modern Turkish male brutality. Another leading female role appears in the movie “The Bloody Crescent” (Krovavyi polumesiats / Кровавый полумесяц), which was produced by Drankov. This movie focuses on the sufferings of a Russian girl in an Ottoman harem. Turks are shown as silly and weak beings, deceived by the real enemy of Russia, which is Germany. Russians also shot movies focusing on their successes in the battlefield. One such film was about the capture of the Turkish town of Erzurum "The Storming and Capture of Erzurum" (Sturm i zahvata Erzuruma / Штурм и захвата Эрзурума).The film, did not show any battle scenes, instead there were long marches of Russians troops under snow and hordes of Cossack cavalry riding towards the city. Erzurum itself is shown like in a documentary, with the camera showing a series of Armenian churches, Turkish mosques and destroyed houses in sequence. At the end of the film, Russia is shown as a proud woman in a boyar costume and a soldier sitting at her feet holding a flag bearing the Turkish crescent and the inscription “Erzurum”, shouting “God Save the Tsar”. This move was not only propaganda but it was also kind of a documentary aiming to show the Russian audience the daily lives of Russian soldiers and the scenic spots from captured territories. Most of the information about the movies are taken from an excellent book by Hubertus F. Jahn, titled “Patriotic Culture in Russia During World War I” (Cornell University Press, 1995). I would also like to thank my friend Natalia Alexandrovna Timoshina for drawing my attention to these movies and providing me with visual material. |
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Turkeyswar.com / © Altay Atlı / This page is last updated on: 11.12.2009. |