1001 Nights's logoCreated byAly Jetha &Directed byEddie SorianoVoices ofColin MurdockCountry of originCanadaOriginal language(s)EnglishNo. Of seasons2No. Of episodes52 Production company(s)StudiosReleaseOriginal network(Canada)(Canada)(United States)Original releaseDecember 25, 2011 ( 2011-12-25) –2012 ( 2012)1001 Nights is a Canadian animated television series developed and produced at Studios in Vancouver, based on stories from. The show is created and co-directed by and Aly Jetha.Borrowing from the original premise of the classical tales of, the TV series features, the storyteller, in a Persian court with her sister Donyazad, King, Prince Shahzaman and a playful monkey named Maymoon. The show premiered on in Canada on December 25, 2011 and on in French-speaking Canada.

  1. 1001 Nights Season 1 Episode 1
  2. 1001 Nights Turkish Serial Movies Aquarius Man

In the United States, the show premiered on on January 2, 2012. This is the first time a media company has serialized the books of into an animated TV series for children. This show also aired in on.

Contents.Premise Another day at King Shahryar's court and another problem presents itself. Does Shahryar have a toothache? Is Maymoon 'borrowing' Shahzaman's pistachios? Scheherazade always has a delightful story that will entertain and teach everyone a great lesson. She will often use the court characters in her stories. There are also a number of recurring characters such as and Dina, Mujab and Samir.

A red herring is presented in each episode such as a flying carpet which leaves room for the stories to continue.Episodes Season 1 No.overallNo. Animation Magazine Article by Ramin Zahed. 10 June 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2012. 9 November 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2012.

1001

PBS Documentary on World Literature 1001 Nights. Retrieved 9 April 2012. Animation Magazine Article by Ramin Zahed. 5 October 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2012.

Leo Awards Official Website. Retrieved 24 April 2012. Leo Awards Official Website. Retrieved 24 April 2012. Leo Awards Official Website.

Retrieved 13 July 2012. Leo Awards Official Website.

Retrieved 19 June 2013.External links.

I have to admit that I was kind of prejudiced about this TV series as I don't like soap operas in general and that is why I haven't watched it when everybody was going crazy about 1001 NIGHTS in Turkey. How wrong I could be? 1001 Nights is a wonderful TV show! Oh yes, there was the everyday living and loving, but more than anything it was wonderful to watch a show that show people of character working through their everyday lives with respect. There is so little of that in North America on TV, in entertainment, on FB. A show that I could watch with my fourteen year old daughter and help her understand decisions people make in life and how it affects them. We cancelled TV six years ago.

I do not mind reading sub-titles. Binbir gece makes you addicted, if you watch 1 episode, you can be sure you will watch them all. Great actors, very expressive, great music, great directing,great scenario, the subject and the characters very realistic. Berguzar Korel and Halit Ergenc are the perfect pair. Has record audience in Turkey and in Romania, because is different from everything you ever seen. I recommended to everyone.

The only problem is that the information about it, almost it doesn't exist in English, and Turkish language is quite difficult. The story is about Sehrazat, an architect, single mom, that has a sick child. She will do anything to save her sun, including spend a night with her boss, to get the needed money for her sun operation. Firstly,a quick remark to the first critic of the film.To the user called 'deadenedsoul' - I am beyond any expectation the average USA consumer who is fond of reality shows and meaningless all-round movies to appreciate anything from the Turkish cinema culture and heritage or the professional acting or the ideas that lie in the plot of the film but this comment leaves me speechless as it is absolutely not related to 1001 nights.1001 nights is a classy novel which is told by the master of story-telling.

And acted wonderfully by talented and young Turkish professional actors.The fables and strings of though in the series are subtle and meaningful.The story is beautiful in essence and is breathtakingly presented.A wonderful piece of art recommended to anyone regardless of nationality or religion. The thing is. I've seen at first just an episode to understand why everybody thinks it's such a good s.o. After that i just started watching episode with episode and getting mad when missing one of them.

The story is very good.nice emotional problems and normal financial and social issues.The characters are well enough chosen and their acting is very good. The bad things are: kind of strange personality of characters and if you don't understand turkey, you really need subtitles. If you just feel the need to see a soap opera, this is a very interesting and reality-type of soap opera.

Top of it's genre. This show is a complete waste of time. It's like those Argentinian or Brazilian soap operas that make you feel like you're constipated. Or the characters are, for this matter. The scenario is based on exaggerated dramas and meaningless misunderstandings. Something happens, someone gets bad news and boom, you have to look at that person's facial expression for the next 5 to 10 minutes. They never talk to each other and nobody ever finds out what is really going on, which is always something minor and very simple to get through.

All this goes on and on for about an hour and a half which is way too long for a prime time soap opera. I only gave it a 4/10 because the elderly actors Metin Cekmez and Tomris Incer are amazing as the grandparents and some of the other actors (Halit Ergenc and Tardu Flordun for instance) have backgrounds in theater and are also good at their jobs. There is a lot to love about this- even for guys. I have only seen the first series- as that is all I can see on Netfix at the moment - I hope that they do put the rest of it on. Generally I love Turkish series, I did not think I would, but they are gripping, human and there are strong moral themes running through them, without them being preachy about it or moralistic.

They have a beauty, sweep and realism about them that is so lacking in the Hollywood machine. I am pleased Netflix gives me the opportunity to see these and the leads are excellent.

The story is worth watching for the three things; the character of Onur Aksal, his love for Seherezade and the main lesson the series projects that redemption for sin is impossible without repentance and forgiveness. Sherezade, a young, fatherless widow gets a new husband and a repentant father in law, her cursed past is turned into a blessed future.

The plot and action is interesting until episode 45, beyond there, the action stalls. The series should have stopped at episode 66, to avoid re-using old plots and themes. The final 10 episodes didn't do justice to either the couple or the audience, and I ponder if it was really a necessity to expose that sinful night the couple spent together when it was already long forgotten and the two of them married with children from their previous relationships. The series will nevertheless keep you watching till you reach the very end!

There is a certain element of lost-in-translation here. This is a soap.

It is not 'soap-y' - it is a real soap opera with soap level acting, melodrama, soundtrack, production value and storyline. The reason why I say 'lost in translation' is that the Turkish definition of soap is very restrictive.

1001 Nights Season 1 Episode 1

The Turkish Wikipedia article on 'soap operas' is two sentences long. Turkish people consider soaps to be Latin American shows that are mostly about love (the word for soap in Turkish is 'pink series') that go on for years and years. It doesn't need to go on for years. I watched one episode and realized it was a soap. In episode one there is a dramatic walk in the rain where a woman walks from her car to her father-in-law's mansion for 10 minutes (did I say rain?) without an umbrella so that she can ask her father-in-law to pay for her son's cancer treatment. He refuses and she stands there crying for 10 minutes, soaking wet, dripping hair/clothes, repeating 'your grandson is dying' over and over while the violins are wailing full-blast. I'm serious about the violins.

1001 Nights Turkish Serial Movies Aquarius Man

If you enjoy soaps, this may be for you. But otherwise, don't be fooled. Don't expect the quality of Turkish cinema to find its way here. This is not like the industry in other countries where They are not two different formats, but two different industries. They are as far apart as exploitation films and Hollywood films in the US.

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