Ezel (TV series)

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Ezel
GenreCrime
Drama
Thriller
Written byKerem Deren
Pınar Bulut
Directed byUluç Bayraktar
StarringKenan İmirzalıoğlu
Cansu Dere
Haluk Bilginer
Yiğit Özşener
Barış Falay
Burçin Terzioğlu
Bade İşçil
Sarp Akkaya
İpek Bilgin
Salih Kalyon
Tuncel Kurtiz
Sedef Avci
Berrak Tüzünataç
İsmail Filiz
Theme music composerToygar Işıklı
Country of originTurkey
Original languageTurkish
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes71
Production
ProducerKerem Çatay
Running timecirca 100 (90–124) minutes
Production companyAy Yapım
Original release
NetworkShow TV (28 September 2009 – 18 January 2010)
ATV (25 January 2010 – 20 June 2011)
Release28 March 2009 (2009-03-28) –
20 June 2011 (2011-06-20)
Related
Yago

Ezel (Turkish pronunciation: [eˈzæl]) is a Turkish crime thriller TV series that was initially broadcast by Show TV in fall 2009. In 2010 it was transferred to ATV. It has gained a considerably large fan base in Turkey since. Series stars Kenan İmirzalıoğlu, Cansu Dere and Yiğit Özşener in leads. Although it is set in modern-day Istanbul, filming also took place in North Cyprus, Croatia, and England. The series is an adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' 1844 novel The Count of Monte Cristo.

Synopsis[edit]

Betrayed by his trusted friends and the woman he loved, Ömer Uçar returns as Ezel to exact his vengeance.

Summary[edit]

In 1997 in Istanbul, Turkey, Ömer Uçar (Ismail Filiz) and his family lived a comfortable lower middle-class life, until one day his life was changed forever. Ömer had two best friends that he had known for years, Ali and Cengiz. Ömer worked with Ali (Barış Falay) as a motor mechanic, and Cengiz (Yiğit Özşener) when Ömer met and fell in love with Eyşan (Cansu Dere). Ali and Cengiz soon become convinced by Serdar Tezcan (Salih Kalyon), who is also Eyşan's father, to rob a casino. Serdar devises the whole scheme, and figures that it will require four people to pull off a successful robbery. Cengiz was up first in the plot to rob the casino, he was the mole and was working there in order to gain access. Ali comes into play next as the ruthless killer on the night of the robbery. The third accomplice is Eyşan (Cansu Dere), the skilled con-woman who manipulates men for their money as a career and this time her victim would be Ömer. In Serdar's plan, Ömer would be the fourth person to complete the job. Ömer is blamed for the robbery by way of implanting false evidence, misleading the police and ceasing all other investigations on the matter. Serdar's primary motive was the money, though his love for a good con also played a role. Eyşan's, Cengiz' and Ali's motives would be revealed later in the series.

Ali and Cengiz at the time believed that Ömer would only get a few years in jail for stealing the money; however, the robbery went wrong and Ali had to shoot and kill the security guard. The same gun that was used in the robbery was pointed at Ömer by Cengiz just a few days before the crime. After having too many drinks, Cengiz, in a drunken state and wearing gloves, points the gun at Ömer, after which he manages to take the gun away from Cengiz only to leave his prints on the gun, sealing his fate. Further evidence to implicate Ömer to the crime is a jacket that he had previously worn which was also dumped with the gun ensuring the police a swift arrest.

In 1997, when Ömer was blamed for the crime, the commissar (Mesut Akusta) went to the prison cell where Ömer was in there for a couple hours. Whilst the chief commissar was inside the cell, he kept inquiring about the whereabouts of the money, even though Ömer kept denying having done the robbery. Because of his lack of cooperation, Ömer was beaten up for hours. Afterwards, during Ömer's trial, the judge showed the picture of the murder weapon used in the robbery, a gun, and a picture of a similarly related jacket. Although Ömer was still insisting that he was innocent, a witness was called to the stand. That witness was revealed to be Eyşan, who falsely testified that it was Ömer who robbed the casino and murdered the security guard. Eyşan's testimony was to re-establish the evidence and accusations, cementing her betrayal. The plan worked successfully and all the while Ali, Cengiz, Serdar and Eyşan got away with murder and millions of dollars. Ömer went to jail for the crime he didn't commit the day after he proposed to Eyşan.

During his incarceration, Ömer had some very hard times, being beaten almost daily by the chief prison warden who was convinced that Ömer had indeed committed the crime, and wanted to know the exact whereabouts of the money. His family was even threatened, and so his hatred for his old friends grew for what they had done to him. Ömer's only luck was to be taken under the wing of Ramiz Karaeski (referred to as Uncle Ramiz, played by Tuncel Kurtiz), once a powerful mafia type figure who treated Ömer like one of his sons and offered him some protection while imprisoned.

In 2005, Ömer had his face badly cut by the chief warden with two other guards by using a riot in the prison as an excuse to beat Ömer, so he would tell where the money was. Ömer pretended to tell him, so that when the warden dismissed the other guards, a fight to the death meant the head warden was killed. With help from Ramiz, it was made known that Ömer had died but his face was unrecognisable, when actually Ömer escaped the jail and had full plastic surgery. Ömer Uçar then changes his name to Ezel Bayraktar (meaning "eternity" in Turkish) (Kenan İmirzalıoğlu), and returns to get his revenge, unknown to his previous friends, Eyşan and Cengiz (who are now married and have a son), and Ali (who is head of security at Cengiz's hotel) The once simple boy becomes a man exceptionally skilled at gambling, reading people, and fighting, and has considerably high class in society. He is helped by his assistants Kamil (Güray Kip) and Şebnem (Bade İşçil), as well as his prison mentor Ramiz Karaeski.

Eyşan's motive for framing Ömer was to save her sister Bahar's life. Serdar explained to Eyşan that Bahar was terminally ill and would need expensive treatment out of the country at better medical facilities, such as in England. The money would be the only way to pay for that treatment. A torn Eyşan ultimately chose to send her love to what she thought would be a short prison sentence in exchange for her sister's recovery. Cengiz went along with the plan because he fell in love with Eyşan the moment he saw her, and he would do anything she asked. Besides, Cengiz figured that with Ömer in prison he would have a clear path to winning Eyşan's heart.

Ali's motive was the big mystery. Like Eyşan, he greatly regretted sending Ömer to prison, and much later in the series it was revealed that he did so only at Eyşan's prodding. She reminded him that Ali's own father had gone to prison years earlier, having taken the blame for Ali's accidental fatal shooting of a young boy when Ali was a teenager. Ali's father made his son promise him to "become a big man," and so Ali figured his time was running out, and the casino robbery would give him the money and power that would fulfill his promise to his father.

As the first season closes, Ömer, now Ezel, eventually reveals his identify to his former friends, after he believes that he has punished them enough. A second plot comes to the forefront, however, and intertwines with the first. A new villain emerges, more powerful than Ramiz in terms of connections, considered the most powerful man in Turkey, in fact: Kenan Birkan. It turns out that Ramiz and Kenan were best friends 30 years earlier, bitterly torn apart by their common love interest, Selma. It is also revealed that even though Ramiz genuinely loves Ömer/Ezel like a son, part of why he groomed him was to create a good and trustworthy right-hand man to help him battle Kenan.

As the second and final season winds to an ultimate conclusion, the plot moves along at a furious pace, with main characters killed off in substantially every episode. In the final episode (71), the only ones left standing are Ezel, Eyşan, their young son, Ezel's mother and father, Ali, his wife (Ramiz' daughter) Azad, their baby boy Tevfik aka "Tefo" (named after Ali's deceased right-hand man and dear friend), Bade (Ezel's brief love interest), and Sebnem, Tevfik's widow. Ezel (Ömer) and Eyşan have recaptured their love, but an insanely jealous Cengiz rapes Eyşan and nearly kills her, informing the police that Ezel did it. As she lies in the hospital in critical condition, Eyşan reveals that it was Cengiz and not Ezel who did that to her. Meanwhile, Ezel and Ali catch up with Cengiz at a lighthouse and kill him. Ezel then returns to the hospital where the doctors tell him that Eyşan has only a few hours left to live. She wants to die in Ömer's arms.

In a vague and rather metaphysical conclusion, Ezel and Eyşan ride on a train as Eyşan's eyes close and it appears that she has died. Ezel then drinks some liquid from a ring that Ramiz had given him with the instructions never to "wear the ring" (i.e., drink from it) unless he was ready for a new life. Ezel's eyes also close and he tells Eyşan that he is coming to be with her, and that Bahar (who had been killed much earlier in the series) is waiting for them, too. The camera pans to other passengers on the train, the beloved friends and family of Ömer and Eyşan that had been killed, including Ramiz, Bahar, and Ezel's little brother, Mert.

In the final scene, a young man on a motorcycle pulls up to the lighthouse and tells the guard "I am here to see my father." When asked to identify himself, the young man reveals he is Ömer's son. As he approaches the door, the camera shows a silhouette of a man opening the door, and making a gesture as if to scratch his head, much like Ömer/Ezel used to. The audience is left wondering what really happened: Whether that is Ezel, whether he died on that train with Eyşan, or whether he lived. Whether that liquid in the ring was poison or not. Whether or not the train scene, in fact, was real or imagined. That all leaves the possibility of a third season wide open, even though most of the characters have been killed off.

Location[edit]

The story is set in Istanbul, Turkey. Filming took place in North Cyprus, Croatia, England and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Cast[edit]

Actors Characters
Kenan İmirzalıoğlu Ezel Bayraktar
Ema Park Şeyma
İsmail Filiz Ömer Uçar
Cansu Dere Eyşan Atay
Yiğit Özşener Cengiz Atay
Barış Falay "Kerpeten" Ali Kırgız
Tuncel Kurtiz Ramiz Karaeski
Sarp Akkaya Tevfik Zaim
Bade İşçil Şebnem Zaim
Sedef Avcı Bahar Tezcan
Haluk Bilginer Kenan Birkan
Salih Kalyon Serdar Tezcan
İpek Bilgin Meliha Uçar
Beyazıt Gülercan Mümtaz Uçar
Burak Dakak Kemal Uçar Mert Uçar
Burçin Terzioğlu Azad Karaeski
Güray Kip Kamil Çamlıca
Utku Barış Serma Can Atay / Can Uçar (Bayraktar/Tezcan)
Rıza Kocaoğlu Temmuz Kocaoğlu
Kıvanç Tatlıtuğ Ramiz Karaeski / Sekiz
Berrak Tüzünataç Bade Uysal
Nurhan Özenen Selma Hünel
Levent Can Kaya
Bengü Benian Nükhet Özbağ

Awards[edit]

Year Category Winner Award
2010 Best Turkish Series Ezel Golden Butterfly Awards
2010 Best Actor Kenan İmirzalıoğlu Golden Butterfly Awards
2010 Best Series of the Year Ezel Galatasaray University
2010 Best Actor Kenan İmirzalıoğlu Galatasaray University
2010 Best Series of the Year Ezel Bahçeşehir University
2010 Best Series of the Year Yıldız Technical University
2010 Best Series of the Year Istanbul Technical University
2010 Best Series of the Year Kabataşlılar Association
2010 Best Series of the Year Burç Special College
2010 Best Scripted Format C21/FRAPA Format Awards
2012 Best Drama Special Prize Seoul International Drama Awards

[1]

Ezel in other languages[edit]

Ezel was translated multiple times and broadcast in foreign channels, most notably to :

The movie has been sold to over 100 countries.[citation needed]

Adaptations[edit]

Armenia's leading TV channel, Shant TV, purchased the script rights to the show and produced its own TV series featuring local actors and actresses who resemble their Turkish peers. The Armenian producers hid the fact that the show was originally a Turkish production, fearing protests from the Armenian audience.[2]

The series was also adapted into a Mexican telenovela Yago, and by Romanian TV channel Pro TV under the title Vlad.[3]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Home". ezel.tv. Archived from the original on 4 May 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  2. ^ Tension with Armenia affects airing of TV show, Hürriyet Daily News, 23 July 2012
  3. ^ AUDIENȚE TV. Câți români au văzut primul episod din Vlad? Pro TV, cu peste jumătate de milion mai mult decât Antena 1, Pagina de Media, 26 February 2019

External links[edit]