Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

System Of A Down Helps Document 1915 Armenian Genocide In "Screamers

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

  • System Of A Down Helps Document 1915 Armenian Genocide In "Screamers

    SYSTEM OF A DOWN HELPS DOCUMENT 1915 ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN "SCREAMERS," OPENING DEC. 8

    Starpulse.com, CT
    Dec 6 2006

    Imagine if your life, your very being, was threatened each day simply
    because of the color of your hair, your skin or where you lived. Yet
    genocide, the deliberate and systematic extermination of a national,
    racial or cultural group goes on outside our very windows every day.

    It would seem unfathomable that such mass murder could happen in the
    21st century, yet far too many still get away with it.

    The evils and ugliness of genocide have long been reported in the
    world press to great indifference. The message is significant but its
    communication is stodgy. Today's world demands relevance, attention
    to detail and delivered in a way that is both understandable and
    connected. Nowadays, music delivers the message.

    The vastly popular, hugely influential, 16 million selling, Grammy
    Award winning band System Of A Down have lent their voice, music, and
    support to a ground-breaking new film called "Screamers." Directed
    by the award-winning humanitarian filmmaker Carla Garapedian,
    "Screamers" is an internationally produced documentary that covers
    the history of modern-day genocide and genocide denial, beginning
    with the Armenian Genocide in 1915, and how the world's inactions
    lead to other massacres. "Screamers", which recently won the Audience
    Award at the AFI Film Festival, is distributed by Maya Releasing and
    opens in Los Angeles and Orange County on December 8th at the Mann
    Marketplace in Glendale, the Mann Chinese 6 in Hollywood, the Mann
    Criterion in Santa Monica and AMC's The Block in Orange.

    System Of A Down have always worked to spread the message about
    official Armenian Genocide Recognition within the U.S. and other
    countries where they have yet to formally acknowledge that it took
    place. (Most incredibly, a lot of the band's fans in their teens and
    twenties have learned about genocide not through school or the media
    but directly through the band's music, actions and statements.) The
    band felt compelled to work with this unique project that hauntingly
    illustrates how the denial of those crimes lead to more genocides of
    the 20th Century - from the Holocaust to Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda...and
    all the way to present-day Darfur.

    In the film, there are personal stories of genocide survivors,
    policy critics and whistleblowers - the "screamers" as they have
    become known. When it comes to genocide, America's interest has
    always been to stay neutral, no matter how wide-scale the carnage,
    with successive Presidents conspiring to turn a blind eye to genocides
    as they are happening. After the Holocaust, we may say 'never again'
    -- but we don't mean it.

    Using SOAD's music as the backdrop to historical footage and current
    accounts from genocide survivors - including lead singer Serj Tankian's
    grandfather, one of the few remaining eyewitnesses of the genocide in
    Turkey, "Screamers" presents some of the great questions of our time:
    Can we stop genocide? Do we really mean 'never again'?

    And how can we take action to prevent atrocities of this magnitude
    from happening in the future?

    "Screamers" is directed by Carla Garapedian, conceived by Peter
    McAlevey and Carla Garapedian and produced by Nick de Grunwald,
    Tim Swain, Carla Garapedian and Peter McAlevey. The film features
    System Of A Down vocalist Serj Tankian, guitarist Daron Malakian,
    bassist Shavo Odadjian and drummer John Dolmayan.

    Interesting highlights of "Screamers":

    *It's a documentary about genocide.

    *Though the emphasis is on the Armenian genocide, the same thing is
    going on now in Darfur.

    * It features the uber popular System Of A Down.

    * The band members are all of Armenian descent.

    *A lot of their music and concert footage appear in the film.

    * Heretofore ignorant, a lot of their fans in their teens and twenties
    have learned about genocide directly through the band's music and
    statements.

    * Movie features newly named Nobel Prize winner for literature
    Orhan Pamuk.

    * France sought to calm an uproar in Turkey and the EU after its
    Parliament voted that's it's a crime for anyone to deny the massacres
    of Armenians in Turkey were anything but genocide.

    * Filmmaker Carla Garapedian was a high profile journalist. She was
    the first American to anchor the BBC News.

    http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/200 6/12/05/system_of_a_down_helps_document_1915_arm_8
Working...
X