OK, I've watched "Kırık Plak" many times, but now is the first time I've noticed that Zeki Müren apparently didn't know how to play the piano (2'14'' and onwards):
What's the big deal, anyone might think? But I'm shocked, because__ do you know Mahsun Kırmızıgül? The arabesk guy who (they say) can barely talk, just as the other arabesk guy, İbrahim Tatlıses, (they say) can barely read or write? Well, I actually saw Mahsun Kırmızıgül playing "Moonlight Sonata" in the "Aşka Sürgün" series. I mean, he was putting his fingers on the right keys all the way through! So... does this mean that Mahsun Kırmızıgül can play the piano, and Zeki Müren couldn't? That can't be true, can it?!
...Talking about "Kırık Plak" -- here's some more drama:
Note the changing time on the clock and the sound of fabric being torn at 3'44''. Ouch. (According to the story, this evil woman blackmails Zeki into being her sex slave. This is especially sinister because she's already married to someone else--the guy between 3'58'' and 4'02''--who is as evil and scheming as she is.)
Funny thing: Turkish cinema audiences seemed to be mostly male, and whereas in some cases they were queuing up to see a sex flick, in this case Osman Seden wants us to believe that all those tough guys go to the movies regularly to have some tears jerked out of them by Zeki's singing and similar stuff. 1'53'' -- "Your heart is made of wood, you brute!" one man says angrily to another's cynical remark (I don't understand the meaning of their entire dialogue, though; I wish someone could clarify it for me).
...Why do tearful Bollywood melodramas, for example, get a huge male audience in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan? Do men like to see beautiful leading actresses with loose hair showing cleavage and striking "suggestive" poses, plus muscular male leads to identify with? They probably do. I'm not sure whether they're equally attracted by sentimental storylines.
As for Turkey, the males there saw this kind of characters in their movies too, but they also saw something very different: sensitive and submissive men being ordered around by tough women. Maybe Zeki Müren tricked his male audiences into liking this--with his singing. I mean, he made 18 movies, so they must have been hits... But there's a lot to explore here.