12 March: The Junta poster

12 March: The Junta (1994)

"12 March: Junta"

9.019940h 54mTR
DocumentaryHistory

Directed by Bülent Çaplı

Rating

9.0/10

Runtime

0h 54m

Language

TR

Release

May 29, 1994

Director

Bülent Çaplı

Overview

We are now saying goodbye to the 1960s. The 60's started eventfully on May 27. It ended as eventfully as it began. The '70s inherited escalating violence, student riots, and rumors of intervention. Prime Minister Demirel was trying to put out the fire in the street and to calm the increasingly restl...

Cast

Mehmet Ali Birand

Mehmet Ali Birand

Self-Narrator

Saadettin Bilgiç

Saadettin Bilgiç

Self

Süleyman Demirel

Süleyman Demirel

Self

Fakih Özfakih

Fakih Özfakih

Self

Emin Değer

Emin Değer

Self

Celil Gürkan

Celil Gürkan

Self

Altan Öymen

Altan Öymen

Self

Uluç Gürkan

Uluç Gürkan

Self

Mumtaz Soysal

Mumtaz Soysal

Self

Mahir Kaynak

Mahir Kaynak

Self

Fuat Doğu

Fuat Doğu

Self

Muhsin Batur

Muhsin Batur

Self

Introduction

In this latest movie review, we dive deep into 12 March: The Junta (1994), exploring its intricate plot and standout performances that have everyone talking.

We are now saying goodbye to the 1960s. The 60's started eventfully on May 27. It ended as eventfully as it began. The '70s inherited escalating violence, student riots, and rumors of intervention. Prime Minister Demirel was trying to put out the fire in the street and to calm the increasingly restless army on the other. The October 1969 elections were held in this atmosphere and the Justice Party came out of the ballot box again. May 27 came by overthrowing the DP government, but the AP, which declared that three of the three elections held since the 1960s, were the continuation of the DP, emerged successfully. Demirel was about to roll up his sleeves for a new era. He felt that no one could stop him now. He was wrong. As he was dizzy from victory, he fell at Caesar's fault. Forgot about Brutus...

🛑 Story ExplainedSpoiler Warning

Our story explained section breaks down the complex narrative of 12 March: The Junta. The full story follows a progression that challenges typical tropes, leading to a climax that requires careful analysis.

🏆 Final Verdict

5 / 5 Stars

A triumphant piece of cinema that blends gripping narrative with breathtaking visuals.

Related Movies

Latest Reviews & Explanations

In-depth reviews, endings explained & more

All Reviews

1 Discussion