Film festivals Berlin Film Festival 2019

A Tale of Three Sisters (Kız Kardeşler)

Berlin Film Festival 2019: A Tale of Three Sisters (Kız Kardeşler)
Berlin Film Festival 2019: A Tale of Three Sisters (Kız Kardeşler) | Review

The obscenely photogenic Anatolian Mountains of Turkey form the backdrop to director Emin Alper’s bewitching A Tale of Three Sisters (Kız Kardeşler). Unfolding exclusively in a ramshackle village, it would be easy to conclude that the film takes place generations ago, instead of the somewhat-recent past (the 1980s). If it wasn’t for the occasional car and glimpse of a powerline, the feature could comfortably pass as a century old. Indeed, when some of the village elders smile, their teeth are reminiscent of ancient ruins. The infrequent cars are there to ferry two of the titular three sisters back to their home village under a gloomy cloud of failure.

It was their deceased mother’s wish that the trio of siblings be sent to the city to work as beslemes (becoming both a quasi-foster child and maid to a wealthy family), but this wish came to an abrupt end for all concerned. The eldest, Reyhan (Cemre Ebüzziya) had already returned in disgrace (of the bun-in-the-oven variety). Her father Şevket (Müfit Kayacan) unhesitatingly married her off to Veysel (Kayhan Açıkgöz), unaffectionately referred to as a halfwit, whose vague sense of his own inadequacies proves to be dangerous. The film opens as the two other sisters Nurhan (Ece Yüksel) and Havva (Helin Kandemir) are driven back to the village, like defective merchandise being returned to its manufacturer.

Şevket wishes that his daughter’s employers had tried harder to make his girls more obliging (“You should have slapped her”), and the clearly defined gender roles of the setting ring true. The sisters aren’t in complete subjugation to their father, but have little control over how their reunion in the village quickly escalates into something far more ominous. It’s a consistently appealing feature, even though it doesn’t always hit its emotional targets, and sometimes remains impassively two-dimensional. The score also occasionally feels inapplicable to the action, verging on quirkiness when it should be opting for murkiness. But with that spectacular backdrop and winning performances, A Tale of Three Sisters still manages to entice.

Oliver Johnston

A Tale of Three Sisters (Kız Kardeşler) does not have a UK release date yet.

Read more reviews from our Berlin Film Festival 2019 coverage here.

For further information about the event visit the Berlin Film Festival website here.

Watch four clips from A Tale of Three Sisters (Kız Kardeşler) here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FD8I7qfon0E

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y8U11CcVGOM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0cXv2XymwFU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EF8y8rHyKZQ

More in Berlinale

“I want everybody to have a discussion”: Mohammed Hammad on Safe Exit at Berlin Film Festival 2026

Laura Della Corte

“It’s an unusual space for a biopic, and that was interesting to me”: Grant Gee on Everybody Digs Bill Evans at Berlin Film Festival 2026

Selina Sondermann

Salvation

Selina Sondermann

Josephine

Selina Sondermann

Yo (Love Is a Rebellious Bird) 

Selina Sondermann

“Your film becomes a living thing”: Gabe Klinger and Marina Person on Isabel at Berlin Film Festival 2026

Laura Della Corte

“Paraguay is a country with many unanswered questions”: Marcelo Martinessi on Narciso at Berlin Film Festival 2026

Laura Della Corte

“It’s dedicated to all those men who just kept pressing the gas, thinking they’re moving instead of reflecting”: Assaf Machnes, Ido Tako and Ehab Salami on Where To? at Berlin film festival 2026

Laura Della Corte

“The world around her needs to change”: Liz Sargent on Take Me Home at Berlin Film Festival 2026

Laura Della Corte