Tumgik
#yakamoz s 245
spockvarietyhour · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
favourite trope
6 notes · View notes
quietparanoiac · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Azra. My sister. She looked a lot like you. She used to giggle like that, too.
Yakamoz S-245 (2022), 1x05
16 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
14 notes · View notes
bereft-of-frogs · 2 years
Text
Spoilers for Into the Night/Yakamoz S-245 if that’s something anyone’s concerned about?
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I’m not sure the writer of the Yakamoz S-245 subtitles conferred with the Into the Night subtitler lol, but also getting the same scene in two different shows, from two perspectives, is a kind of cool illustration of how the subtitles can change the tone of a scene. “Everyone pays the price” vs. “You’ll pay for this”.
Like, part of this is also context. For the scene on the left, Ayaz is the protagonist. We have the full context of his confrontation with Markus, 12 episodes worth of characterization that show he is a flawed but ultimately just man, the line itself is a reference to an earlier conversation about justice and revenge. On the right, this person is a complete stranger, introduced as he’s trying to kill an unarmed person on their knees.
(Not that I really think anyone has only watched Yakamoz S-245. I mean, I guess it’s possible? It’s definitely written to be independent enough that you could in theory watch it first, I don’t think you’d miss out on any plot explanation. But I think most people will be watching it in release order. I’d personally recommend that, it’s a lot more fun when you have the Into the Night context, especially episode 5 and onwards.)
But it is the interpretation as well. The line as translated in Yakamoz S-245 is much more sinister. The personal, direct ‘you’ instead of the more general ‘everyone’. The left is really more a commentary on like, balancing the scales of justice, and the right is a pointed act of intentional violence. It’s really interesting how much more malevolent that one line shift colors the tone of this interaction, even aside from the larger narrative context.
12 notes · View notes
chaos-magic-blog · 2 years
Text
I've just finished reading 'The Old Axolotl' by Jacek Dukaj, which is the book Into The Night is based on. I'm not good at book reviews so I'll keep it for goodreads, but I really reccomend it.
Anyways, in relation to the Netflix show, all I can say is that I hope nobody turns into a robot in season 3.
4 notes · View notes
gayalpacino · 2 years
Text
so i really liked into the night (belgian show on netflix) and i’m now watching the turkish spin off (yakamoz s-245) and am really enjoying it so far as well. idk if there’ll be another season of either show or if they’re going to just combine them or not but it’s such an interesting concept. like i really like the story (it’s low key terrifying actually!!) and the characters. i like the found family storyline of into the night and the cultural differences between the two shows is fascinating. like. The direction the show runners decided to go in for each, if that makes sense. anyways i would love it if other countries also made spin offs bc it would be cool to see how each show would differ and how they’d approach the characters, story (and how they’d tie it together) and how their characters react to like. basically the apocalypse.
oh and the turkish one has so much bisexual lighting in it lmaaoooo
4 notes · View notes
gmanem · 2 years
Text
0 notes
turkishcelebritynews · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Yakamoz S-245 (Into the Deep) Netflix Tv Series Cast
0 notes
turkish-dramas · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Yakamoz S-245 (Into the Deep) Netflix Turkish Series Cast
1 note · View note
spockvarietyhour · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
this is night two and the weapons officer who was already hallucinating took a grenade to the missile room and blew himself up, the feckless captain, and crippled that section of the sub (the watertight doors were already sealed.)
6 notes · View notes
quietparanoiac · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
— They all died right before my eyes, so I'm not scared anymore. — So you were scared of me before? Of the man who was protecting you, watching over you from the beginning?
Yakamoz S-245 (2022), 1x07
6 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
16 notes · View notes
bereft-of-frogs · 2 years
Text
Starting Yakamoz S-245:
Oh no this guy’s hot
8 notes · View notes
oh-yes-i-did-not · 1 year
Text
I recently came to understand that I don’t understand what good acting is.
There was this series, or two series, Into the Night, which is a Belgian series, and Yakamoz S-245, which is Turkish. Both are based on the same story, The Old Axolotl.
I haven’t read the original story but from what I understand, The Old Axolotl is about a world post-apocalyptic and what happened after the world ended. Both of the TV-adaptations are about what lead to that, how did the apocalypse happen. I assume the original novel told how, so they both have the idea that the sun is a deadly lazer aka dawn brought death with it and the only survivors were those unreachable by sun, so in a transcontinental airplane, always flying just beyond the sunrise, according to Belgium, or on a submarine, too deep to be reached by suns radiation, according to Turkey.
So anyways, I was interested in both and watched the first season of both. And to me, Yakamoz was the clear winner. I didn’t want to strangle each and every character, tho some of them were super childish. Unlike in Into the Night, where I hated pretty much everyone, except the kid. And Yakamoz was technically more “badly” made so it had some super awkward cuts and editorial decisions that felt jarring but overall I liked it more, even if lowed budget.
But then I talked about it with other people and they all seemed to favor Into the Night, because the actors in Yakamoz were just so bad.
And like, I don’t know how to reply to that because I don’t see any difference. How were the actors in Into the Night performing better, unless you count me hating about all of them because of how the plot made them? What made the people acting on Yakamoz less better?
Or like, what is good acting?
To me it’s someone making me believe they are the character they play, which makes repeated starrings a bit difficult for me, but I try to manage. But they make a sad face so I know they’re sad. They make angry face so I know they’re angry. Is that not enough?
And if it’s not then pray do tell me why no one has made issue of that one jarring transition in the beginning Gladiator that is so bad it could make someone abandon watching the movie altogether? Why have none of you commented on it? Since we’re supposed to pay attention to minutiae of things. Why do none of these shitty editing things ever make you say shit?
1 note · View note
magiclilybean · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
taksimtravesti · 2 years
Text
Into the night ve Yakamoz S - 245
Into the night ve Yakamoz S – 245
Into the Night ve Yakamoz S 245 isimli Netflix dizileri aynı konudan esinlenen ve hatta sonunda birbirine bağlanan iki ayrı dizi. Evet 2 ayrı dizi ancak her ikisinde de konu aynı. Güneş doğduğu an herkes ölüyor. Ve genel olarak dünyanın hep gece tarafında kalmaya çalışan bir gurup insanın hikayesi ele alınıyor. Into the Night (gece doğru) serisinin konusu, oyuncuların hepsinin, aynı uçaktaki…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes