Tolga Güleç

The dystopia of reality through employees who enter the workplace with coffins, an elevator as a cemetery in the plazas, mechanized white-collar people, people who get money out of their heads, businessmen snarling at each other and a boss who throws up money.

A woman who came to Turkey from England to look for the biggest flaw of her life.. A man who locked his past in a room and left it into dust... and two different stories brought together by the words dripping from a pen in the locked room...

Working together for many years, two policemen decide to steal by taking a tip from a thief. In the house they enter to rob, they become the prisoners of the power struggle that develops with wrong ideas. The struggle for supremacy, which completely takes them under control, continues with various lies. Telling the biggest lie will commit the biggest crime.

8 important executive members of some notable corporations of the country are kidnapped during a recent trial.

5.7/10

The series is set in the 1960s and revolves around the Akarsu family. Ali Akarsu is the patriarch of the family and he works as a seaman and the captain of a ship. He is married to Cemile and they have 4 children: Berrin (a law student at İstanbul University), Aylin and Mete, who are high school students as well as 5 year old son, Osman. When Ali goes on one of his many trips, he begins an affair with a Dutch woman named Caroline and that leads to the disintegration of the Akarsu family. When Caroline comes to Turkey uninvited, Cemile wounds her by stabbing and goes to jail. Caroline is hospitalized. There she sets her terms: Ali must get a divorce from Cemile in order for Caroline to drop charges against Cemile and release her from jail. Caroline moves in with Ali. Cemile and children get evicted from their house and are without money. Ali lets Cemile and children live in the unfinished house in Zeytinli, while setting obstacles for Cemile for finding a job. Ali's mother Hasefe supports Cemile totally and helps her on daily basis.

6.7/10