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Turkish Cinema and Television Industry in the Digital Streaming Era

by Tuna Tetik (Volume editor) Deniz Gürgen Atalay (Volume editor) Nilay Ulusoy (Volume editor)
©2022 Edited Collection 218 Pages

Summary

Turkish Cinema and Television Industry in the Digital Streaming Era addresses three main comprehensions: aesthetic transformation in the Turkish Cinema and television industry, new authors and changing filmmaking ways in the Turkish Cinema’s SVOD age, and Turkish originals on national and international SVODs. The book is a collection of contemporary studies and research to explore the current scene in the Turkish Cinema and television industry’s ways of production, features of the contents, and structures of the SVOD catalogs. Featuring coverage of a broad range of topics and studies, including production and post-production, independent and arthouse filmmaking, immersive sound, local narratives, digital watching experiences, quality tv, digital auteurism, and participatory culture, the collection of chapters is designed in a specific structure for academics, researchers, scholars, students, and media professionals.

Table Of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Acknowledgements
  • Preface (Tuna Tetik, Deniz Gürgen Atalay, and Nilay Ulusoy)
  • Contents
  • Foreword (Hasan Kemal Suher and İdil Karademirlidağ Suher)
  • Part 1: Aesthetic Transformation in Turkish Cinema and Television Industry
  • Chapter 1: Local Narratives and Global Sequences: An Analysis of the Sequence Structure of Netflix Turkey Films (Özgür Çalışkan)
  • Chapter 2: A Qualitative Audience Research on Digital Cinema: New Generation Watching Experiences and Changing Habits (Özlem Özgür)
  • Chapter 3: Immersive Sound: Next Step in the Evolution of Film Sound Experience (Yahya Burak Tamer and Cemal Barkın Engin)
  • Chapter 4: Insider Conversations: Film Making in the Age of Digital Media (Deniz Gürgen Atalay)
  • Part 2: Contemporary Filmmakers and Changing Filmmaking Ways in Turkish Cinema’s SVOD Age
  • Chapter 5: The Netflix Effect on Turkish Television: New Authors, The Question of Quality TV and Kulüp (2020-2021) (Melis Özbek)
  • Chapter 6: “The Most Daring Woman’s Story Ever Told in Turkey” (Kaya Özkaracalar)
  • Chapter 7: Gaining Digital Auteur: Digital Auteurism on the Turkish SVODs, GAIN (Didem Tok Eminçe)
  • Chapter 8: Crossing Roads in Multiple Media: The Case of Alper Çağlar and Börü 2039 Franchise on BluTV (Cüneyt Bozkurt and Erkan Büker)
  • Part 3: Turkish Originals on National & International SVODs
  • Chapter 9: The VOD Scene in Turkey, a.k.a. Haluk Bilginer-Verse: The First Years of Turkish Originals on the Global and National VOD Services (Tuna Tetik)
  • Chapter 10: Media Convergence, Transmedia Storytelling, and Participatory Culture in Turkish Series: A Case Study of Leyla ile Mecnun (Ece Arıhan)
  • Chapter 11: From Fi to Phi: Reality in Quality (Dilay Özgüven Tetik)
  • Chapter 12: Mubi: A Curated Cinematic Digital Platform on Television (Funda Kaya)
  • Afterword (Sırrı Serhat Serter and Hakan Erkılıç)
  • Biographies of the Authors

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Foreword

Hasan Kemal Suher and İdil Karademirlidağ Suher

Like any other art, cinema and television are influenced by society’s politics, philosophy, or economics, as well as technology. Variations in demands and needs, changes in expectations, and developments in communication technologies have changed the message’s content, nature, and conveying method. Although modern perception claims that there is an uncompromising conflict between art and technology, these two are closely related. Because cinema and television are not only about “what” to convey but also about “how” to convey, how a scene is shown is as critical as what a scene is all about.

Turkish Cinema and television industry vastly transformed during the digitalization of the media. The filmmaking process and releasing methods have changed. Although digital media platforms, delivering online media using SVOD, AVOD, or TVOD, models caused newsworthy discussions in the Turkish Cinema and television industries, it is fairly straightforward that they serve the demands of today’s audience. Each and every day, the viewers’ expectations increase due to environmental conditions, such as pandemics, busy work life, and economic reasons. Sometimes digital transformation was inevitable for internal reasons, including the appeal of home comfort, the desire to utilize time effectively, and the power of on-demand control on the publication.

Netflix, which has affected and diverted the TV and new age media streaming, has changed the expectations and habits of the viewers. As viewers preferred digital platforms offering flexible hours and options and websites offering streaming services, digital television production companies rapidly created new streaming platforms. As the Netflix subscriber numbers increased and Netflix became popular, some phrases have been created and used in daily conversations.

“The Netflix effect” includes, but is not limited to, streaming content to any place, device, or desired time. One of “the Netflix effects,” “binge-watching,” or more common usage, “Netflixing,” means watching the episodes of a TV series all at once or in a short period of time. Moreover, this behavior is not only limited to young generations. When did the masses waiting for a new episode for a whole week become impatient? As the viewers felt the power of control, they realized the power that they hold. For the content producers, the content consumers’ viewing needs and demands are still not too important. However, platforms cannot oversee these requirements. The art and aesthetics of the content ←17 | 18→are still significant. The viewer holds the right to like or dislike a production. However, any production, served as a service, should consider the demands and expectations of the consumer.

On the other hand, assessing digital platforms as an enemy of the movie theater would be a mistake. With current technology, viewers can get a theater experience at home. However, knowing the boundaries of digital platforms is as essential as knowing the advantages. As long as the viewers enjoy the movie theater atmosphere and seek to be there, movie theaters will be in service.

There was an increasing trend in the usage of digital streaming platforms all over the world. However, pandemics expedited the process. This situation forces serious changes in the movie value chain. For this increasing trend on digital platforms, vertical connections of the conventional distribution value chain have been questioned. New business strategies and new working dynamics have become necessary. The developments in digital technologies inevitably changed each and every step of the movie production process, from pre-production to release. Cinematography, sound, non-linear editing, releasing, exhibiting, and over-the-internet distribution applications have not only affected the distribution of the content but also increased the content’s power. How will this change be analyzed academically? How can we theoretically read the movies? The need for detailed viewer research and deep analysis are highly required and will be an integral part of content production.

Indeed, this book, “Turkish Cinema and Television Industry in the Digital Streaming Era,” will be one of the best inception points and must-have readings that will enlighten the path to the digital media world.

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Özgür Çalışkan

Chapter 1: Local Narratives and Global Sequences: An Analysis of the Sequence Structure of Netflix Turkey Films

Abstract: Digital platforms are transforming the way of watching in national and international media, both experience and content. In particular, these platforms produce content by broadcasting from locally to globally, allowing local content to enter global circulation. For this reason, the international circulation of local narratives is increasing. Therefore, narrative structures can also change. In this chapter, the sequence structure of Netflix Turkey films is examined with the sequence approach applied to traditional narrative films globally in order to understand the narrative connection of local productions with the global. In addition, the selected films are compared with the films that were screened in movie theaters in Turkey and later released on Netflix with the same directors. Finally, the findings are categorized and discussed in the context of the selected films’ narrative, production, and content. As a result, the sequences in the narrative structure of the selected films are discussed, their similarities and differences are revealed, and the variability of the sequence structure is interpreted.

Keywords: Sequence, Genre, Narrative, Netflix Turkey, Turkish Films, Script

New Presentation of Classic Narratives

Cinema is discursive by nature, and its discursive aspect always comes to the fore, although the production process, the devices used, or the way it is exhibited and consumed change. The story that is wanted and told amid the growing content crowd becomes even more critical, as technological facilities in production, consumption, and access can make the production of a film easier. As the ways of producing and watching films change, works reaching from the local to the global, and the global penetrating the local, the cinema’s narrative structure enters into circulation, reaches more audiences, and thus gains visibility. The audience, who used to only go to the film theatre or reach the physical product of the film they want to watch, can now access the film content with any device they carry or have at home with an internet connection. In particular, developing projects in the national arena, and presenting these projects to all countries where they broadcast has brought their narrative diversity to a different level.

In the context of cinema, the first thing that draws attention to the differences between the offline and the online areas seems to be the quantity of the content. ←21 | 22→Film theatres are affected by the combination of many factors such as physical facilities, venue, screening schedules, number and types of films released, and box office revenues. However, it is not possible to talk about the huge impact of these elements on online on-demand platforms. These platforms do not only produce content in the countries where they were established. They increase the number of content by producing productions in the countries where they have users.

Global Supply and Local Demand for the Narrative

Global subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) platforms such as Netflix, HBO, Disney+, Prime Video, and Apple TV+, which serve both internationally and locally, also produce content in the countries they have access to audiences. Netflix, which entered the Turkish market in 2016 from these platforms, is the first local content producer of SVOD in Turkey as a global platform. It should be noted that these platforms are perceived as non-linear television channels, which is not wrong. However, these platforms do not offer only television-specific content such as series or reality shows. In addition, these platforms also produce films.

Lobato (2019, p. ix) emphasizes that the international television narratives formed through SVODs are “traveling narratives.” In the case of Netflix, although it looks like a television familiar to its consumers, it also provides a cinematic experience (Lobato, 2019, p. 43). This new format can be called transnational, if not global, for reasons such as dozens of content released simultaneously in national markets, the ability to transfer to far-flung countries quickly, and the rise of online translation networks (Lobato, 2019, p. 53). Citing his own experience, Lobato (2019, p. 70) states that thanks to Netflix, he has access to many contents from Russian gangsters to Turkish soap operas that he could not access before. Therefore, Netflix can be transnational, global, and cosmopolitan to some extent. On the other hand, Netflix complicates concepts such as shared history, stories, aesthetics, or society (Jenner, 2018, p. 206). In addition, because Netflix is a transnational broadcaster, it has to create an appeal in this context, and it has to successfully shape this “transnational grammar,” especially in its productions (Jenner, 2018, p. 226). At this point, a dilemma arises for the films in this study.

Although they are the productions of a global platform such as Netflix, the films examined are not films that can be included in Western cinema because some films can be classified even in the category of world cinema, considering their screenwriters and actors and those who do not have Netflix productions. Sue Clayton (2011, p. 176), a director and writer, emphasizes a more complex situation in terms of authorship and cultural influences, production, and ←22 | 23→consumption of cinema, apart from traditional methods, in the context of world cinema. In addition, Clayton (2011, p. 177) draws attention to the scarcity of studies and writings on screenwriting in world cinema, apart from directing, cinematography, production, audience, and censorship, regarding film criticism. Based on this idea, Clayton (2011, p. 178) also states the importance of questioning the narrative process of screenwriters outside of Western or Hollywood and how they create narratives. On the axis of this thought, it becomes even more important how the contents produced by a western company but which cannot be considered western in the context of the production actors and the story universe, are narratively created and how they are presented. For this reason, I think that the acts structure, which is considered universal, and the sequence approach, which is more applied to western films, are more suitable for examining films.

Sequential Streaming of the Narrative

Scriptwriting has always been an art, and it should be because it has to be (Lewis Corley and Megel, 2014, p. 14). Therefore, how the story is constructed, which determines the visual and narrative structure of the film before its transformation into its finished form, cannot be ignored. In addition, the script carries the artistic weight of the narrative part of cinema as an audio-visual and narrative art. In addition, in film criticism studies, which have a significant situation in film studies, although a visual work is examined, the text that composes it can also be analyzed. Promisingly, Craig Batty (2014a, p. 1) states that there has been a shift from director-centered criticism to screenwriter-centered criticism and mentions the importance of this situation for understanding the importance of screenwriting.

Details

Pages
218
Publication Year
2022
ISBN (PDF)
9783631889534
ISBN (ePUB)
9783631890714
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631879108
DOI
10.3726/b20191
Language
English
Publication date
2022 (September)
Published
Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Warszawa, Wien, 2022. 218 pp.

Biographical notes

Tuna Tetik (Volume editor) Deniz Gürgen Atalay (Volume editor) Nilay Ulusoy (Volume editor)

Tuna Tetik is an assistant professor in the Film and Television Department at Bahçeşehir University. Tetik received his doctoral degree at Bahçeşehir University, Cinema and Media Research program, and directed short films and a documentary that received international awards. His research interests are superheroes, comics, transmedia, film genres, video-on-demand services, and video games. He is currently teaching several courses on digital editing, screenwriting, and film production. Deniz Gürgen Atalay is an assistant professor in the Film and Television Department at Bahçeşehir University. She received her doctoral degree at Cinema and Media Research program with her dissertation on popular cinema and historiography. She is the author of the book, focusing on historiography of the World War II in the contemporary American Cinema. Her research interests are film theory, popular culture, and gender studies. Nilay Ulusoy is a professor and the head of the Film and Television Department at Bahçeşehir University. Ulusoy finished Marmara University’s Communication Sciences Master’s Program in 2000 and her doctoral studies in 2006. In the same year, she conducted research at the National Center of Cinematography and the Moving Image (CNC) in Paris with a scholarship from the French Institute of Istanbul. She teaches courses on the history of narrative film (M.A. level), film theory, visual culture, and Turkish cinema (Ph.D. level). Her research interests include the language of fashion and Turkish cinema history.

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Title: Turkish Cinema and Television Industry in the Digital Streaming Era