Something Useful
Something Useful
| 12 April 2017 (USA)
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Leyla, a lawyer and a poet, takes the long-distance train to attend her high school reunion dinner. On the train, she meets Canan, a young nursing student in distress. As the conversation develops, Leyla learns that Canan is travelling to assist with the suicide of a paralysed man, Yavuz, who wants to die. At the end of the long over- night trip, surrounded by the stories of people both on and off the train, Leyla decides to accompany Canan on her difficult visit.

Reviews
Linkshoch

Wonderful Movie

SpecialsTarget

Disturbing yet enthralling

Fairaher

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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Marva-nova

Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.

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Ferideniz

I have no words to describe my feelings about it. It is a must watch! I couldn't keep my tears till the end for this movie. It moved something very deep within me and touched the roots of my heart.

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Coshua

I watched this great job couple hours ago. Director has came too. She answered questions after movie. Pelin Esmer is really pretty, successful and kind woman.After last scene, I was like "That's it. Perfect." Viewers of this movie has to decide, is Yavuz gonna die or not gonna die in their minds. That's the point.

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Ali KINCAL

One of the best Turkish movies I have seen in a while.As the train the movie's point-of-view character (Leyla) took moves forward to its destination, the plot thickens. We see some of Anatolia from the train and on the train. 'The Blue Train' has a cozy atmosphere in which Leyla and other passengers who are like a summary of the Turkish society engage in simple but also interesting conversations. Tea, the road, everyday problems, secrets... Almost everything about life is on that train so that we could learn more about death and why anyone would come to desire it.The movie is so full of lovely poetry and literary references in Turkish that I do hope the subtitles can live up to them.I strongly recommend it. It's best to watch it in a chilly day and critique it afterwards with friends at a café that is as cozy as 'the Blue Train', which is exactly what I did.

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nakrugt

I know this will be a little too early and a little too short.Nevertheless, here it is for your information:"The film is basically a bird-eye look towards Anatolia by an urban poet on a train."Hope this will not undermine the effort put in making of this film.Photography is phenomenal, acting is so natural that it looks effortless (but obviously an example of mastery).105 minutes of pure cinematography.

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