Netflix Inc. has scheduled a February 13 premiere for Museum of Innocence, a nine-episode mini-series based on the acclaimed novel by Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk. The move underscores the streaming giant’s strategy of leveraging high-brow regional intellectual property to drive subscriber growth in both the Middle East and international prestige-television markets.
The company released first-look footage on Tuesday, showcasing the production’s 1970s Istanbul setting. The series, produced by Istanbul-based powerhouse Ay Yapim, represents a significant investment in Turkey’s burgeoning “dizi” export industry, which has become a cornerstone of Netflix’s non-English content library.
By adapting Pamuk’s multimillion-selling novel, Netflix is targeting a “prestige” demographic that mirrors its successful adaptations of literary works in other regions. The project carries significant cultural capital:
Intellectual Property: The source material won the Nobel Prize in Literature and is tied to a physical museum in Istanbul founded by Pamuk, creating a unique cross-media ecosystem.
Market Share: Turkey remains one of the world’s leading exporters of television drama; Netflix’s involvement aims to elevate domestic production values to meet global streaming standards.
Release Timing: The mid-February launch positions the series as a tentpole title for the first quarter of 2026, targeting the high-engagement winter viewing period.
The series stars Selahattin Paşalı and Eylül Lize Kandemir as Kemal and Füsun, navigating a narrative of class disparity and obsessive romance—a genre that has historically performed well for Netflix in the Mediterranean and Latin American markets.
Director Zeynep Günay leads a production that features an expansive ensemble cast, including veterans like Tilbe Saran and Ercan Kesal. The screenplay was handled by Ertan Kurtulan, with Pamuk himself involved in the writing process, ensuring brand consistency for the adaptation.
“Museum of Innocence is a multi-layered narrative of obsession and missed opportunities,” the streaming service said in a statement accompanying the clip. The plot follows a wealthy protagonist who begins collecting mundane objects—from hair clips to cigarette butts—belonging to his lover, a premise that lends itself to the high-aesthetic, cinematic style Netflix has favored for its recent international originals.

For Netflix, Museum of Innocence is more than a regional romance; it is a test of whether Nobel-level literature can be industrialized into a global streaming hit. As competition from Disney+ and local rivals like BluTV intensifies in Turkey, Netflix is betting that combining high-end literary pedigree with established domestic stars will secure its lead in one of the world’s most vital content-producing hubs.
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