The Nobel laureate's novel "The Museum of Innocence" has been adapted.

Yesterday, a nine-episode film "The Museum of Innocence," based on Orhan Pamuk's novel of the same name, which was published in 2009, was released on streaming platforms.
«Kemal was the heir to one of Istanbul's most influential families. His life seemed destined: brilliant education, promising business prospects, social gatherings, and an engagement to a girl from his own circle. But everything changed after a chance encounter with his distant relative, Füsun. A spark ignited between them, quickly developing into a secret romance. Their connection began as a fleeting infatuation, but for Kemal, it became the meaning of life. He was ready to go against his family, societal expectations, and his own future, just to be with his beloved,» — states the film's synopsis.
All roles in the series were performed by Turkish actors.
Orhan Pamuk is a Nobel laureate in literature from 2006. His most famous works include "Cevdet Bey and His Sons" (his first novel), "The White Castle," "The Black Book," "Snow," "My Name Is Red," "Istanbul: Memories and the City," "The Red-Haired Woman," and others.
The writer's latest novel is "Nights of Plague" (2021), about a plague epidemic on the Ottoman island of Minger in the Mediterranean Sea. The events take place in 1903. Dr. Nuri and his wife Pakize, sister of the deposed Sultan Abdul Hamid II and (niece of Sultan Murad V), after the chief sanitary doctor of the Ottoman Empire, Warsaw native Bankowski, is killed on the island, remain on the island and begin the fight against the disease. The novel is written from the perspective of Pakize and Nuri's granddaughter, a doctor of history and archivist.
For the book, a case was opened against Pamuk on charges of insulting Ataturk and the Turkish flag.
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