The Edge of Heaven (2007)

  • Year: 2007
  • Released: 27 Sep 2007
  • Country: Germany, Turkey, Italy
  • Adwords: 37 wins & 22 nominations
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0880502/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_edge_of_heaven
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p,
  • Language: German, Turkish, English
  • MPA Rating: Not Rated
  • Genre: Drama
  • Runtime: 122 min
  • Writer: Fatih Akin
  • Director: Fatih Akin
  • Cast: Baki Davrak, Gürsoy Gemec, Cengiz Daner
  • Keywords: germany, prison, mother, loss of loved one, homeland, release from prison,
7.7/10
85/100
90% – Critics
89% – Audience

The Edge of Heaven Storyline

Nejat disapproves of his widower father Ali’s choice of prostitute Yeter for a live-in girlfriend, but he grows fond of her when he discovers that she sends money home to Turkey for her daughter’s university studies. Yeter’s sudden death distances father and son. Nejat travels to Istanbul to search for Yeter’s daughter Ayten. Political activist Ayten has fled the Turkish police and is already in Germany. She is befriended by a young woman, Lotte, who invites rebellious Ayten to stay in her home, a gesture not particularly pleasing to her conservative mother Susanne. When Ayten is arrested and her asylum plea is denied, she is deported and imprisoned in Turkey. Lotte travels to Turkey and she gets caught up in the seemingly-hopeless situation of freeing Ayten.—omayra73@yahoo.com

The Edge of Heaven Photos

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The Edge of Heaven Subtitles Download

Arabicsubtitle Auf.der.anderen.Seite.2007.DVDRip.XviD-TBMs.AR
Arabicsubtitle The Edge of Heaven.DVDRip
Danishsubtitle Auf Der Anderen Seite (DVD rip)
Danishsubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.LIMITED.DVDRip
Englishsubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP2.0.H.264-ISA
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Englishsubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.LIMITED.DVDRip.XviD-AEN
Englishsubtitle the.edge.of.heaven.2007.limited.dvdrip.xvid-aen
Farsi/Persiansubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP2.0.H.264-ISA.Per
Farsi/Persiansubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP2.0.H.264-ISA
Auf.de.anderen.Seite.2007.720p.HDTV.x264-MCR
Farsi/Persiansubtitle Edge Of Heaven 2007 DVDRiP
Farsi/Persiansubtitle Auf.der.anderen.Seite.2007.DVDRip.XviD-TBMs
Farsi/Persiansubtitle َAll Bluray 720p & 1080p
Farsi/Persiansubtitle َAll Bluray 720p & 1080p
Farsi/Persiansubtitle َAll Bluray 720p & 1080p
Finnishsubtitle Auf der anderen Seite.2007.DVDRip.XviD-EMPiRE
Finnishsubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.LIMITED.DVDRip
Germansubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.LIMITED.DVDRip.XviD-AEN
Germansubtitle Auf.Der.Anderen.Seite.2007.AC3.DVDRip.XviD.EMPiRE
Greeksubtitle Auf.der.anderen.Seite.German.2007.DVDSCR.XViD-VCF
Hebrewsubtitle The Edge of Heaven.DVDRip.XviD.German- Eng Hard Coded Subs-fw
Indonesiansubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.Limited.DVDRip.Xvid
Indonesiansubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.DVDRip.Unknown
Indonesiansubtitle Auf.Der.Anderen.Seite.(2007).DVDRip.XviD-TBMs
Koreansubtitle The Edge of Heaven (2007) (1080p AMZN WEB-DL x265 afm72)
Koreansubtitle Auf.Der.Anderen.Seite.2007.AC3.DVDRip.XviD.2CD-EMPiRE
Malayalamsubtitle Auf.der.anderen.Seite.2007.DVDRip.XviD-TBMs.ml
Norwegiansubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.LIMITED.DVDRip
Russiansubtitle Auf.der.anderen.Seite.German.2007.DVDSCR.XViD-VCF
Spanishsubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.LIMITED.DVDRip.XviD-AEN
Swedishsubtitle The.Edge.of.Heaven.2007.LIMITED.DVDRip
Turkishsubtitle Auf.der.anderen.Seite.German.2007.DVDSCR.XViD-VCF

The Edge of Heaven Movie Reviews

Complex and thought-provoking

“The Edge of Heaven”, original title “On the other side”, takes up a number of ideas from Faith Akin’s previous film. But it takes them also in a new unexpected direction – with a political view (on Kurdish problem, on Europeans), with additional protagonist types – now the conflicted German Turks are joined by ‘naive’ Germans proper and ‘seen-too-much’ Turkish (Kurds) proper. All of the characters were very well constructed and, as representative types of their social groups, offered much material for the audience to reflect upon.

Indeed, a knowledgeable audience would find this film to be replete with commentary on our social and political reality, the Anatolian and the European, and on the respective preconceptions and stereotypes. Some of the commentary is tragic, some is ironic. Here, in Bulgaria, the audience laughed and applauded when the German granma said with all her conviction to the Kurdish girl that everything in her country will become alright once they join the EU. On the other hand, an émigré Kurdish audience will probably applaud a very moving and full of suspense depiction of the Kurdish struggle in Turkey, which is however frank both to Kurds and to the Turkish authorities. It included small cameos from the conflict that are for the first time openly publicised: for example, the revolutionaries as they are taken out of their hideout to be arrested by the police, announce their names to the street and the world, in apprehension of being disappeared by the authorities; minutes later the crowd of passer-bys claps to the departing police vans in a popular approval of the suppression of kurdish struggle…

Still, the myriad political and social themes are only a setting to a much more personal story. The opening of one’s soul, the crossing of inner walls that separate us from those who love us. This story is repeated three times, in different context, for the three characters who remain alive to cross ‘to the other side’: the German mother who accepts her daughter’s ideals, the German-Turkish son who forgives his father, the Kurdish girl who takes the love of her friends over her revolutionary commitment. However, the director allows no one of them to consume their redemption within the film’s running time – their characters remain tragic.

It is a very powerful film. As a friend said after the screening, it tramples over you like a steam-roller. The emotional mix of the previous film “Head-on” had me cry, but crying releases the pain. This one doesn’t let to release the tension even at the final scene. It will stay with you for days after.

Once every few years, a film this touching comes along

I usually comment on films right after I’ve seen them. However, “Auf der anderen Seite” (The Edge of Heaven), touched me in a way that few films do, so a month has passed.

This story of two sets of mothers and daughters, a father and his son…and a gun seems familiar, but its resolution is anything but. To lay out the plot would be daunting. So much ground is covered, yet it unfolds effortlessly. F a t i h Akin’s screenplay is elliptical–the story starts where it finishes–but by the end, when the opening scene is replayed, our journey with these characters puts us, indeed, on the edge of transcendence.

Amid the desperation on display, small details brim over the images: a son waters his father’s tomato plants pausing to taste the ripened fruit, a mother pits cherries that stain her fingers, another manicures her nails to avoid a quarrel, we imagine a bookstore’s–specifically a German language bookstore in Istanbul–smell and the safety it can bring to a foreigner…. These domestic details are set against much larger, although finally insignificant, struggles: the cultural divide of immigrants, students revolting against an oppressive government, how imprisonment can deaden the soul. But F a t i h Akin wants the basic struggles of family bonds to be central here. It’s the resolution of family rifts–small and large, emotional and physical–that are urgent.

The choice of settings, music, lighting… all carefully selected to build toward one moment that catches us off guard. When a foreigner asks “What is Kurban Bayrami?” (a Turkish holiday) the many seemingly disparate elements that we’ve been watching–in good faith because they’re so rivetingly told–suddenly come together, it almost knocked the breath out of me.

Whether or not we as viewers have lost a father or mother or a child, through death, physical separation or emotional turmoil, we can understand what these characters suffer. And how all that can be healed—the willingness to have faith that good intentions can mend this troubled world—is something like a miracle to find illustrated on film. The weapons these characters lay down to pursue goodness don’t necessarily have the effect they intend, but as we watch lives torn apart and then healed we see what they don’t. And we carry that lesson out of theater with us.

Where is the edge of heaven?

Auf der anderen Seite (2007), written and directed by Faith Akin, was shown in the U.S. with the title “The Edge of Heaven.” This is a powerful and moving drama that interweaves the stories of six people–a father and son, and two mother-daughter pairs. The father and son are from Turkey, but live in Germany. At the outset of the movie, one of the mother- daughter pairs is separated, with the mother in Germany and the daughter in Turkey. The other mother-daughter pair are Germans living in Germany. By the end of the movie, for various reasons, each of the six has traveled from one country to the other.

Faith Akin, himself a German of Turkish heritage, obviously understands and is comfortable in both worlds. Some of the characters in the film make the transition from one culture to the other seamlessly, but some suffer from extreme culture shock, and all of them are changed.

The acting is uniformly excellent. I particularly admired Nurgül Yesilçay as a Turkish student and radical, and Patrycia Ziolkowska as the young German woman who befriends her. Fassbinder’s muse, the incomparable Hanna Schygulla, has possibly the most difficult role of the six, and, as always, she is outstanding.

We saw that film at the Rochester High Falls International Film Festival, but it will work well on a small screen. This is an extraordinary film, and it’s definitely worth finding and viewing.