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Close-Up Kurdistan
ES ES-OVNI RSC-3348 · Item · 2007
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

In the documentary film CLOSE­UP­KURDISTAN the Kurdish director Yüksel Yavuz creates a connection between his personal story of immigration and the current situation of the Turkish­Kurdish conflict. In the film he makes a personal journey which takes him from Hamburg through Stockholm to Turkey, ending in the north of Iraq, in the refugee camp Maxmur in Iraqi Kurdistan. Throughout this journey he meets among others his parents and old friends, some of whom went to the mountains to become guerrilla fighters, others who fled the country and went into exile. The rest which were forced to stay in the homeland villages were persecuted and murdered, because they fought for justice and cultural freedom, which still doesn't exist in Turkey. One of the main protagonists is the intellectual Dr. Ismail Besikci who, because of his academic research on the Kurdish culture, had to spend 17 years in prison. Then there is Abdulkadir Aygan who fought as a counter­guerrilla in the dirty war against the Kurdish resistance. The role of the women during that period of anger and hatred is also defined very well, for example there is Berivan, who became a guerilla fighter and left her family to live and fight in the mountains. Although she knew that an arrest meant not only her death, but also humiliation and torture, she decided to become a member of the kurdish movement. The film makes a tight line­walk between political facts and personal stories and asks many questions: Why is Turkey not able to solve the Kurdish question? Why did a bloody civil war, where relatives and friends fought against each other, take place? How is the situation today? How will Turkey behave as a country in the ongoing negotiations with the European Union? It shows us that totalitarianism on both sides resulted in a senseless war that nearly destroyed the social and cultural diversity in Turkey. Like that, the film is also an attempt to bring the Kurdish people and the Turkish population together.

Coal, Earth, Home
ES ES-OVNI CTX-S012-SS007-0057 · Item · 2005
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

“Coal, Earth, Home” is a documentary about what home means to a group of villagers who may lose their 750-year-old hometown, Heuersdorf. The Saxon village is to be razed for the expansion of the adjacent open pit mine - one of the last surviving mines of the continually shrinking brown coal mining industry in the former East Germany.

Cocktail Hour
ES ES-OVNI CTX-S010-SS006-0001 · Item · 2003
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

The second, ¡Tchkung! Vs. The State, is a one hour tribute to the relationship between a band and their local police and fire departments in the mid-90's. Recommended more for the serious ¡Tchkung! fan than for the casual viewer, it features home movie style depictions of performances, backstage preparation, police intervention, and street chaos.

Untitled