
Nuri Bilge Ceylan
**Nuri Bilge Ceylan** (born in Çanakkale, Turkey, 1959) is one of the most prominent contemporary Turkish filmmakers. Known for his contemplative and visually refined style, Ceylan explores universal themes such as alienation, loneliness, incommunicability, and the complexity of the human condition.
His works are characterized by slow pacing, long takes, and superb cinematography that often incorporates vast, melancholic landscapes. A regular at the Cannes Film Festival, he has received numerous awards. His most famous films include *Uzak* (Distant, 2002), *Bir Zamanlar Anadolu'da* (Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, 2011), winner of the Special Jury Prize, and above all *Kis Uykusu* (Winter Sleep, 2014), which earned him the Palme d'Or. He continues to explore the psychology of his characters, often intellectuals, in works such as *Ahlat Agaci* (The Wild Pear Tree, 2018) and *Kuru Otlar Üstüne* (About Dry Grasses, 2023). Ceylan is a master of contemporary auteur cinema, capable of creating introspective narratives of great emotional depth.