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  • Something To Scream About: Screamers Director And System Of A Down J

    SOMETHING TO SCREAM ABOUT: SCREAMERS DIRECTOR AND SYSTEM OF A DOWN JOIN FORCES TO DECRY ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Gabriel San Roman

    Orange County Weekly, CA
    Dec 8 2006

    On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turkish government began a systematic
    campaign of arrests, deportation, and annihilation against the Armenian
    people. By 1923, mass killings had claimed the lives of an estimated
    1.5 million Armenians in what became the first genocide of the 20th
    century. To this day, the Turkish government continues to deny that
    genocide took place, and despite numerous nations recognizing the
    Armenian Genocide, the United States, after 91 years, has yet to
    officially recognize it.

    Activists in the States have tried to reverse the U.S. government's
    shameful stance. All-Armenian and Grammy Award-winning rock group
    System of a Down has used its influence to raise awareness about the
    genocide, and now documentary filmmaker Carla Garapedian, herself an
    Armenian American, chronicles the band's activism and the history of
    the Armenian Genocide in her new film Screamers, which opens Friday
    in Orange.

    I recently talked with Garapedian and System of a Down drummer John
    Dolmayan about the project.

    OC Weekly: Carla, a documentary featuring System of a Down titled
    Screamers will carry the connotation of what Serj Tankian and Daron
    Malakian do on stage, but it has a different meaning, doesn't it?

    Carla Garapedian: It does. I got the term from Samantha Power's
    Pulitzer Prize-winning book, A Problem From Hell: America in the Age
    of Genocide. She very cleverly tells the story of genocide in the last
    century. Powers argues that in each case of genocide, whether it's
    the Armenian genocide or what's going on in Darfur, Sudan, now, there
    are always individuals who raise the alarm and say this is going on
    and we have to do something about it. She calls those people screamers.

    Why did you choose to explore the Armenian Genocide through the prism
    of System of a Down?

    Garapedian: All the members of System of a Down are grandchildren of
    genocide survivors, as I am. They have a very strong sense of their
    cultural identity and the denial of the genocide. I didn't think about
    making a film on genocide until I heard their music and learned about
    them. They're a worldwide phenomenon and they are affecting how young
    people think about politics. It struck me that this band was having an
    effect that was really different. It made me think that using their
    music, passion and energy might help me tell the story of genocide
    in the last century.

    John, why did System of a Down decide to be a part of this film?

    John Dolmayan: We didn't do this movie for any other reason than to
    do what we felt was a commitment we have to follow through with.

    Being Armenian, I feel very strongly about genocide and injustice. I
    was compelled to be a part of this. I'm proud of the film. I think
    the film came out well. It didn't come off preachy; just informative.

    How personal is the Armenian Genocide recognition cause for you? Did
    your activism on this issue begin before System of a Down was formed?

    Dolmayan: It's a very personal issue for all of us in the band. I
    don't know if I would consider myself an activist, even to this day.

    As a human being, not just an Armenian, I believe that genocide is
    wrong. If that makes me an activist, I guess that's the definition of
    it. It's very personal for us. We each had a loss of family members,
    a loss of our history, and a loss of our ancestry. We can only date
    our families back to a certain extent. It deeply motivated us in our
    lives to prevent other genocides from taking place.

    There's a scene in Screamers where you and Serj approached Congressman
    Dennis Hastert about the Armenian Genocide resolution in a respectful
    manner. Did you feel like Hastert blew you off?

    Dolmayan: I think that he did what most politicians do. First of all,
    he didn't acknowledge the letter Serj and I handed in him in Chicago.

    It was obvious he read it at some point. He's just doing what
    politicians do. Most of their lives are spent distorting truth.

    Carla, what audience do you hope to reach with Friday's opening at
    the Block in Orange?

    Garapedian: There are many fans of the band in Orange County, and
    they were really critical in the early days of System of a Down's
    success. We want to show the film to pay homage and thank those fans
    who supported the band in the early days, although this isn't a System
    of a Down movie; it features them. Also, there are many Armenians in
    Orange County, and the film is going to get its start by appealing
    to those core audiences. By going to the film in its first weekend,
    people will be sending a message out to the rest of the country that
    there can be a film about genocide and the message will also be sent
    that there are people who care about this issue. That's what I'm
    hoping to do in Orange County.

    Gabriel San Roman is the assistant producer of Uprising, a popular
    prime time radio program on KPFK Pacifica Radio in Los Angeles.

    http://www.ocweekly.com/film/film/someth ing-to-scream-about/26345/
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