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    Attila '74 - The Rape of Cyprus

    Attila '74 - The Rape of Cyprus
    Director: Michael Cacoyannis
    Actor: Michael Cacoyannis
    Studio: Fox Lorber
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $24.98
    Buy New: $4.46
    You Save: $20.52 (82%)



    New (5) Used (4) from $4.45

    Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 24 reviews
    Sales Rank: 33815

    Format: Black & White, Color, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Ntsc
    Language: English (Original Language)
    Rating: NR (Not Rated)
    Region: 0
    Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
    DVD Layers: 1
    DVD Sides: 1
    Picture Format: Academy Ratio
    Number Of Discs: 1
    Running Time: 101 Minutes
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
    Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

    ISBN: 1572528516
    UPC: 720917521725
    EAN: 9781572528512
    ASIN: B00004STH0

    Theatrical Release Date: 1975
    Release Date: July 5, 2000
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
    Shipping: Expedited shipping available
    Shipping: International shipping available
    Condition: BRAND NEW FACTORY SEALED

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    Customer Reviews:   Read 19 more reviews...

    1 out of 5 stars Very Bad   June 25, 2007
    Osman Ozter (Cyprus)
    2 out of 3 found this review helpful

    As a person who have been living in Cyprus since 1967, I can easily say that, the content of this DVD doesn't reflect the realities of what was lived in Cyprus in 1974. It is a one-sided, nationalist reflection of most probably an ill personality. I am rating this DVD as 1-star. That single star is for the fact that, it is a very good example of how one can twist the realities of history according his desires.


    3 out of 5 stars Review of Attila '74   May 21, 2007
    A. Albarran (NYC, NY USA.)
    1 out of 2 found this review helpful

    The best way to put this is that this is a very good documentary of the events that transpired in cyprus in 1974.
    The scenes were shot just after the conflict and the people that the filmaker speaks to have fresh memories of the events that transpired. There are some funeral scenes that are a bit intense and it seems that the mouners are playing to the camera a bit. Being a history buff , I thought the filmaker did a good job , got alot of the green line shots and did his best to show that Turkey was the evil invader in his opinion. I don't remember him speaking to many Turks though.



    2 out of 5 stars One side of the coin   December 5, 2005
    Cypriot (CYPRUS)
    18 out of 26 found this review helpful

    I am a displaced "greek" Cypriot from the North part of Cyprus.
    This documentary fails to examine what led to Turkey's invation nor any of the atrocities we commited against the weaker turkish minority which we oppressed for years. A turkish-Cypriot could find no job, not even as a waiter, and we forced them to live in ghettos, in terrible poverty.
    IT WAS GREECE WHICH RAPED CYPRUS FIRST! In 1974 I was fourteen and I recall the first civilian casualties being from Greek tanks. Turkish tanks landed on the island five days later. This is never mentioned in our History textbooks. Most of us have been brainwashed through an intensely hellinocentric education where Greeks are always the good guys and the innocent victims, and through Greek Orthodox Religious Studies (an obligatory school subject since age five). Our schools breed racist Orthodox talibans who are totally intolerant of other religions, including other Christian denominations, and especially hostile towards Moslems. And when these talibans commit racist crimes (as in the 2005 murder of a turkish-Cypriot boy in Limassol) the press describe them simply as remote cases of mental illness instead of as mass products of our education system.
    The church here is so influential that I consider my country as the " Iran of the Christian World ". There even exist Iran-type church courts which nowadays (fortunately) deal mainly with Family Law cases.
    The Republic of Cyprus is the only European Union country where authorities violate human rights (US State Department Report on Human Rights, 2006) and the police torture citizens (Amnesty International Press Release on the torture of two handcuffed students by 12 policemen, April 2006). Trafficking of women for prostitution is semi-legal, big scandals are never resolved, night bombers, murderers and drug barons are seldom brought to justice, etc., etc. All this in half an island of 600.000 people with one of the highest percentages of policemen in Europe!
    I don't think the situation in the Northern part is that bad. There is a lower crime rate, it is a secular state where moslem clergy have no political power and it does not foster the illusion of being a "European" country. People there are more down to earth and less spoilt.
    Although the so-called "official" Republic of Cyprus is an independent member of the UN and the European Union it is in fact A PUPPET STATE OF GREECE:
    1.We have been programmed to consider ourselves Greeks and not Cypriots. If Greece wins in an international contest in which Cyprus has lost, we celebrate as if our own country has won. We are ashamed to consider ourselves simply citizens of our country without any prefixes. If a native dares call himself a Cypriot and not a Greek, he is accused of being a traitor. (Same as if Norwegians believed to be Swedes just because they speak a similar language and have the same religion!)
    2.Cyprus is the only country in the world without its own National Anthem (we use Greece's).
    3.Our national flag is semi-official (it is subordinate to the Greek flag which is conspicuous on all government buildings, schools, churches, clubs, in the army, even in athletic facilities). During soccer games Cypriot flags are considered "provocative" symbols and are confiscated by the security but Greek flags are permited.
    4.Major political decisions taken by our governement must first obtain the OK of the Greek prime minister.
    5.Our army is run by officers from Greece.
    In April 2004 the United Nations, with the support of the United States, carried out a referendum for peace and reunification. The vast majority of greek-Cypriots voted No, employing all sorts of excuses (the president even wept on TV in his attempt to convince people vote No), while turkish-Cypriots voted Yes. The government, backed by the large communist-turned-nationalist party, considers this "No" as a victory against the almighty United States !!!
    It seems that most of us believe the ideal solution to be the construction of a Time-Machine that would transport us back to before 1974 and reestablish greek dynasty in the island.
    Deprogramming greek-Cypriots will not be an easy task and cinema can make a significant contribution. This film however is biased and superficial. It fails to clearly show younger generations what really happened before and during 1974 so as to prevent the recurrence of similar events in the future.



    5 out of 5 stars Brilliant - a slap in the face for those who done it!   October 24, 2005
    A. Andrea (from the UK, now in Cyprus)
    6 out of 11 found this review helpful

    You can always tell those who support the invasion as they are the ones who rate this poorly. This documentary shows what every Cypriot experienced and remembers of that terrible period.
    It pushes history into the faces of those who are in denial. Just like the Germans try to forget the second world war, the Turks try to ignore that what they did was exactly as the title says: Rape Cyprus!!!



    3 out of 5 stars The Politics of Film   September 11, 2005
    Michael Bronfenbrenner (Seal Beach, CA)
    8 out of 9 found this review helpful

    Interesting how so many of the comments are not about the film itself, but about the self righteousness of perceived truth.
    One thing for sure, this war, what led up to it, the consequences that it had for the people of Cyprus, is truly a forgotten place in world history, very few people know that it happened and what really ocurred.
    For that, this film has value, and whether it pretends or not to be a sole source is perhaps not important--any film will represent a point of view.
    Was it a good film as a film? I found it interesting because the topic is interesting, and there should be much more visibility of what happened, to both sides, during and after the 1974 war.
    My perspective on war is this:
    I was in a restaurant during the Falkans War, they announced that the British had just sunk the Argentinian Cruiser, and 800 Argentinians had died. The room erupted with cheering.
    My companion, who was from Cyprus, said: "But think of all the mothers"
    The room went quiet.
    This film does the same for me, for the people who suffered on both sides.



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