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The Edge of Heaven
Overlook Pick

The Edge of Heaven

72
User Score359 ratings
TMDB 7.216+20072h 2mGerman
Drama

Synopsis

The lives of six German-Turkish immigrants are drawn together by circumstance: An old man and a prostitute forging a partnership, a young scholar reconciling his past, two young women falling in love, and a mother putting the shattered pieces of her life back together.

Director
Fatih AkinFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Filmstiftung Nordrhein-Westfalen7 production companies
Release
September 27, 2007Released
Box Office
$18MBudget $4M

Top Cast

8 of 43
Nurgül Yeşilçay
Nurgül Yeşilçay
Ayten Öztürk
Baki Davrak
Baki Davrak
Nejat Aksu
Patrycia Ziolkowska
Patrycia Ziolkowska
Lotte Staub
Tuncel Kurtiz
Tuncel Kurtiz
Ali Aksu
Nursel Köse
Nursel Köse
Yeter Öztürk
Hanna Schygulla
Hanna Schygulla
Susanne Staub
Erkan Can
Erkan Can
Cousin Ufuk
Nejat İşler
Nejat İşler
Commissioner

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Apr 2, 2026

This is quite a powerful full-circle drama that starts with a young but uninspired college professor “Nejat” (Baki Davrak) who disapproves of his widowed father (Tuncel Kurtis) inviting his prostitute friend to be his live-in lover. “Yeter” (Nursel Köse) isn’t just on the game for drugs and her pimp, she is determined that her daughter back home in Turkey will get the education she was denied and so have better prospects. “Nejat” respects that and soon the pair are getting along better - to the chagrin of the father whose erratic behaviour causes a tragic occurrence that sees him incarcerated and estranged from his son. Concerned for her well-being, “Nejat” now travels to Turkey to try to track down “Ayten” (Nurgül Yesilçay), a young woman whom we know has already befriended “Lotte” (Patrycia Ziolkowska) in Germany. “Ayten” isn’t legal and she is deported, but to a Turkey that considers her a member of a banned organisation and so, now she is imprisoned, “Lotte” sets off after her - despite the protestations of her mother “Susanne” (Hanna Schygulla). Guess whom “Lotte” ends up sharing an apartment with? Yep, told you it was cyclical. What’s more engaging here is that though each story is connected, there is a surprising lack of the contrived as the stories seamlessly morph from the light-hearted to the more serious and switch from nation to nation. It illustrates cultural, sexual and political distinctions without ramming them down our throats and though perhaps it does linger longer on the “Lotte” and “Ayten” story than I felt it needed, it’s an at times poignant look at what really matters in life.

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