Brother's Keeper (2021) Poster

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8/10
Watch this movie, right now!
drarzudogru3 August 2023
First of all, I would like to say that the script is particularly good and very strong. The acting is also above standard and very good. As the movie progresses, we see this. Actually nobody is clean. Everyone has a negative impact on the development of the story. I was especially mesmerized by the successful acting of the child actor. The only flaw is that the visuals could have been better. The fact that it was a low-budget movie affected the money allocated to cinematography. Directing indoors is difficult. But the director successfully overcame this challenge. If you want to watch a different movie, this movie will be a perfect alternative for you.
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8/10
A portrayal of Turkey
A thorough portrayal of people of Turkey conveyed by the illness of a primary school student. The plot is well written down to the smallest details such as the cigarette brand of the state teacher. Dialogues and actions fit into the world and reflect the selfishness and irresponsibleness of people clearly.

8/10, must watch for anyone interested in Turkey.
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8/10
Deep
atractiveeyes17 January 2022
It's so beautiful, sensational, genuine, simple and deep. It tackles an interesting important subject and implies a very powerful message and sheds light on a sad depressing reality. It's nicely shot, written and acted as well.
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6/10
It has some interesting elements, but it doesn't work completely
Sgt_Pepper11023 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The photography is pretty good in general, but I didn't like the use of so many shots in each scene, it just felt messy. The acting is also good, but the script is weak, especially the dialogues. I feel the plot needed a lot more weight. The sickness of the kid doesn't seem bad enough to push the whole story. I mean, we don't see the kid in much pain, he's just asleep and really pale. I think the director focuses too much on the bureaucracy and corruption of the place instead of the humanity there. There's no character development at all, we never find out anything about them and this is crucial when it comes to the relationship between the two kids since it's not clear how much the protagonist cares for his friend or how close they really are. There are always distractions that instead of telling us more about the place or the people there, they just drag the story and keep showing us the negligence of these adults who are supposed to take care of the kids. I don't question the veracity of their negligence, but it was a little hard to believe that even when three or four adults finally start caring about the sick kid none of them checked his body or vitals and all of them repeated he just didn't have a fever. It drove me nuts to hear this like five times. I mean, if someone is really unconscious you try a little harder to make him react. I think the movie needed more characters and points of view to really cover everything the director wanted in a more organic way. I'm sure there are many real stories like this one, and even worse, all over the world, some even include more violence and sexual abuse, but the way it's told and put together just doesn't seem realistic. During the last part of the movie things get better, but I felt they were not very coherent with the early part of the story, especially the protagonist's attitude since he seemed to hate and blame everyone for his friend's situation and the plot twist just felt forced. It was only interesting in the sense that it makes you think it was his fault, but you know the adults are really responsible.
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10/10
A good exapmle of cinema
utkuakdogan7 February 2022
Such a simple and perfect movie.

Cinema should not be all about spending a fortune on GDI and stars.

A simple, good scenario, realistic characters and dialogs. It will take you to the atmosphere. You will feel cold and worried. It is telling the real, everyday people with good and bad inside them.
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6/10
Fixing one mistake for another
wurideflame13 November 2021
The child is trying to fix mistake made by the adult, but accidentally creates a bigger fault. I think it's the adult who should be more to blame.

Although good intentions make bad things happen, why not make things right at the beginning?
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9/10
The Horrors of a Boarding School for Minority Children
eedinur31 March 2022
The landscape is stark, the buildings are too, and so is what happens inside them. This is a Turkish boarding schools for several hundred Kurdish students of various ages, who are told by one teacher that there is no such thing as the Kurdish region. They speak Turkish, have to work, and are constantly harangued, harassed, and bullied by the adults who are responsible for them. Cruelty is part of the game, as is neglect.

Cruelty, neglect, harassment-all are infectious, and some of the students learn from their teachers how to torment their peers. Eleven-year olds Yusuf (Samet Yildiz) and Memo (Nurullah Alaca) are among the youngest and smallest and when Memo gets sick after one such experience, no one but Yusuf is concerned and it's left to the young boy to tend to his friend and insist, quietly, respectfully, carefully, consistently, that care must be given. He continues doing so even as feelings of loneliness and helplessness take over.

As the adults wake up to the need to do something about the by now unconscious Memo, a blizzard closes the roads, the heat has stopped working, secrets are revealed, accusations and insinuations abound, incompetence becomes obvious, and everyone tries to shift the blame to others. Eventually surprising things are revealed.

As Yusuf, Samet Yildiz is outstanding. Shy and quiet, yet alert and taking everything in, he embodies the lone child with one friend, who sees and hears and incorporates everything. Director and co-writer Ferit Karahan was a student in a boarding school like the one depicted here and, like Yusuf, he reveals subtle dynamics in addition to the crass ugliness. A lowly worker, almost off frame, takes his hat off despite the freezing temperatures when he is called to answer the headmaster's questions. A quick but shocking moment of a teacher walking in the hallway at night with a small student while all the others are in their beds. The headmaster sending Yusuf and another student to get tea for all the adults who congregate in the sick room but not for the students who've been keeping vigil over Memo. A sick room with a door that doesn't open and nothing usable other than aspirin .

This is an excellent film, adding to all too few others about the horrors of boarding schools for minority children in other parts of the world. Check out Rabbit-Proof Fence (Australia) Sami Blood (Sweden) and Our Spirits Don't Speak English: Indian Boarding School.
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6/10
An Intimate Bond Amongst Oppression
AliiDii30 July 2023
Set against the backdrop of a remote boarding school in the mountains of eastern Turkey, Brothers' Keeper explores the tender yet tragic friendship between two Kurdish boys. Director Ferit Karahan evokes a melancholic tone through cinematography and long, lingering takes of the school's austere setting. We follow the quiet Yusuf (Samet Yildiz) as he navigates the oppressive institution, ruled by abusive administrators who seek to stamp out Kurdish identity.

When the defiant Memo (Ekin Koç) arrives at the school, he and Yusuf develop an intimate bond that provides solace amidst the unrelenting trauma and violence. Their wordless glances and subtle gestures reveal a depth of unspoken devotion. However, the constant threat of separation and punishment haunts their relationship. Karahan patiently draws out the tension, refusing easy sentimentality or melodrama.

While simple and elegantly crafted, I hoped for more complexity and background on the characters' inner lives. The sparse dialogue and restrained style create emotional distance at times. Still, Brothers' Keeper remains a poignant examination of love and resilience in the face of systematic cruelty.
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8/10
Far from home, close to a circle of nothingness
8bithummingbird18 July 2022
In a remote town lies a boarding school for the underprivileged children between the high hills of the mighty mountains. During the record-shattering winter, all of a sudden a kid is getting really sick and the hidden secrets are unravelling one by one.

Cold face of bureaucracy reminds itself in almost every chance of resolution. Coldness, loneliness and awkwardness of the coming of age, having noone to care for you, cold faces, cold waters to shower with, cold doors hits you right in the face...

Obsessed principals and teachers doing everything but their core job, to care for the children... It reminded me good old ''Ondskan'' and ''Les Choristes'' if you know what I mean. The taste is different in this one though.

If you wanna get lost in a snow storm-torn town and try to find a way out of a big crisis, here's you pick, don't miss it!
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10/10
Superb
fccaracas9 October 2021
So sad and well acted ..i cant say more sorry...bm.
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