Farewell to False Paradise explained

Farewell to False Paradise
Director:Tevfik Başer
Producer:Ottokar Runze
Music:Claus Bantzer
Cinematography:Izzet Akay
Editing:Renate Merck
Distributor:Pari Films
Runtime:92 minutes
Country:West Germany
Language:German

Farewell to False Paradise (German: '''Abschied vom falschen Paradies''') is a 1989 German drama film, directed by Tevfik Başer. The film won one award and was nominated for another at the 1989 German Film Awards.

Plot

Elif, the widow of a Turkish migrant worker in Germany, has been sentenced to six years in prison for killing her husband. She is sent to a prison in Hamburg which at first serves as a dark setting of claustrophobia, punishment, and isolation. Her perception then changes as she encounters female solidarity which contrasts with her previous domestic life under patriarchal restrictions as a Muslim-Turkish wife. Having escaped her restrictive life by killing her husband, Elif begins to view the prison as a kind of paradise where she is able to develop a new female identity. While imprisoned, she learns to speak German, cuts her long hair, sheds her traditional headscarf, and gradually adopts the style of a Westernized woman who wears jeans and sneakers. As time goes on, Elif’s prison sentence gets reduced on account of good behavior and she is set to be released. She fears that she will be sent back to Turkey for another murder trial or may get killed by her brother-in-law for revenge, so she attempts to commit suicide.

Cast

Awards

At the 1989 German Film Awards, the film won the Film Award in Gold for Outstanding Achievement, which went Zuhal Olcay. The film was also nominated for Outstanding Feature Film.