Sahsiyet -
Forget everything you think you know about prestige TV. Şahsiyet is not just a "Turkish Breaking Bad." It is a masterclass in slow-burn nihilism, a character study so deep it feels like an autopsy of the human soul. Created by Hakan Günday (a renowned novelist) and directed by Onur Saylak, this 12-episode masterpiece won the International Emmy Award for Best Drama Series in 2019—and it earned every second of that statue. Agâh Beyoğlu (Haluk Bilginer) is a 65-year-old retired legal clerk. He lives a life of suffocating routine in a decaying Istanbul apartment. He is invisible to his neighbors, a burden to his daughter, and forgotten by a world that has moved past him. He has just been diagnosed with Alzheimer's.
Available on PuhuTV (with international distribution on Amazon Prime and Topic in some regions). Seek it out. Before you forget. sahsiyet
Nevra is not your typical "brilliant but broken" cop. She has a form of dissociative identity disorder. She passes out and wakes up in strangers' beds with no memory of how she got there. Her pursuit of Agâh is not just a job—it is a chase for a stable self. She and Agâh are two sides of the same fractured coin: one is losing his memory to biology, the other to trauma. Their cat-and-mouse game is a philosophical duel. Forget everything you think you know about prestige TV
Instead of succumbing to despair, Agâh makes a chilling decision: before his memory completely erases him , he will erase the people who made his life hell. He will become an anonymous serial killer, targeting the "unpunished" criminals who hide behind wealth, status, and legal loopholes. Agâh Beyoğlu (Haluk Bilginer) is a 65-year-old retired
By the final episode, you won't remember the plot twists as much as the feeling: a profound, aching emptiness. And that, ironically, is the point.