2010’s Berlin winner evinces remarkable identification with one child’s evolving view of the natural world. Though its Turkish mountain setting...
2010’s Berlin winner evinces remarkable identification with one child’s evolving view of the natural world. Though its Turkish mountain setting is set down for us in images of limpid, verdant majesty and we are given everything we need to appreciate the ties within the small forest community that holds him dear, this lovely film truly takes place on the soulful face of a six-year-old boy.
Yusuf lives with his mother who picks tea and tends house, while his father harvests the honey of wild bees. There’s a single defining event, but it occurs quietly without warning while people are simply getting on with their uneventful lives. Mostly we are watching Yusuf. Some things about him are touchingly obvious. We see how hopelessly he jockeys for approval at school and how jealously he loves his father, but he’s also a mystery to us, as he is to his parents. Why can he only read when no one is about? Why does he speak only to his father, and then only in whispers? Young Bora Altas is mesmerising in his ability to suggest a child’s magical thinking, enticing us to speculate what strange and wonderful notions about the world and his own impact on it are taking shape in that little head.
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Where to watch Honey (2010)
Honey (2010) | Details
- Award winner
- Golden Bear winner (Best Film), Berlin Film Festival 2010.
- Rating
- PG, for drug content and some sexual references
- Runtime
- 103
- Genre
- Drama
- Country of origin
- Turkey, Germany