Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Movie Review: Deeply personal in Glendale "After Freedom"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Movie Review: Deeply personal in Glendale "After Freedom"

    Los Angeles Times
    May 14, 2004 Friday
    Home Edition

    MOVIE REVIEW;
    Deeply personal in Glendale

    by Kevin Thomas, Times Staff Writer

    Vahe Babaian's "After Freedom" (Monday at 7 p.m. and Wednesday at 2
    p.m.) is a "Mean Streets" set in the prosperous boulevards of
    Glendale, which has become home to a large Armenian community.
    Michael Abcarian (Mic Tomasi) is the conflicted central figure in
    this taut, well-wrought drama set in a tradition-minded ethnic
    community in which loyalties can be as negative as they are positive.
    At 30ish, he feels increasingly obligated to care for his widowed
    father, Leon (Greg Satamian), who years ago gave up a good job with
    British Airways in Soviet Armenia so his children could grow up in a
    free country.

    Unfortunately, Leon has managed only to go from one menial job to
    another, and Michael is getting nowhere as an assistant supermarket
    manager because one of his pals, Mato (Ioannis Bogris), keeps
    pilfering. Worse, Michael and Mato are in the thrall of Avo (Shant
    Benjamin), a cynically manipulative older guy whose criminal impulses
    are escalating.

    Shot in a beautifully modulated black and white by Gary Meek, "After
    Freedom" is a deeply personal film that is also a mature, assured
    work rich in telling details and shot through with humor to offset
    its serious concerns. Tomasi's Michael is a handsome, personable man
    in a longtime relationship with Sophie Chahinian's lovely, confident
    Ana. But his deep bonding with his pals and above all his overweening
    sense of responsibility to his uncomplaining and kindly father could
    cost him Ana, who recognizes his need to grow up and become
    independent.

    The give and take between all the people in this film is essentially
    well-meaning, and Babaian has clear affection for everyone, even the
    hot-headed Avo, who only wants to help his pals get ahead even if it
    means increasingly involving them in shady deals. As Avo, a man who
    has missed his big chance and knows it, Benjamin energizes the entire
    film, which is especially crucial because Michael's predicament,
    although made sympathetic by Tomasi, is his passivity.

    Visually, "After Freedom" offers an unexpectedly lyrical view of
    Glendale, and Babaian creates a sense of an ethnic community and its
    tensions between tradition and change without making it seem exotic.
    Indeed, "After Freedom" is an inviting film in which any audience
    would be likely to recognize itself.

    *

    'After Freedom'

    MPAA rating: Unrated

    Times guidelines: Adult themes, some violence, language, sensuality
    and brief nudity

    Mic Tomasi...Michael Abcarian

    Sophie Chahinian...Ana

    Greg Satamian...Leon Abcarian

    Shant Benjamin...Avo

    Ioannis Bogris...Mato

    A Vitagraph Films release of an After Freedom, L. P. presentation.
    Writer-director Vahe Babaian. Producers Eric Sherman, Babaian.
    Executive producers Sophie Chahinian, Berj Benjamin, Ken Craig.
    Cinematographer Gary Meek. Editors Howard Heard, Tom Ohanian. Music
    Alan Derian. Art director Amanda Rounsaville. Costumes Elaine
    Montalvo. Running time: 1 hour, 28 minutes.

    Exclusively at the Music Hall, 9036 Wilshire Blvd,. Beverly Hills,
    (310) 274-6869; and the Glendale Cinemas, 501 N. Orange St.,
    Glendale, (818) 549-9950.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X