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  • Two films, two journeys

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    Dec 15 2006


    Two films, two journeys

    Author: Bill Meyer
    People's Weekly World Newspaper, 12/14/06 16:56


    Movie Review


    Director Robert Guédiguian (www.diaphana.fr)

    A few years ago, the entire life's work of French communist director
    Robert Guédiguian was screened in a retrospective tribute at the
    Toronto International Film Festival.

    Guédiguian is unique in that he has chosen the setting of Marseilles
    for all his films, using the same principal actors in varying roles.
    This creates an amazing and intriguing sense of continuity, even
    though the themes and stories are extremely different from one film
    to the next.

    It isn't surprising that his films are relatively unknown in the
    United States. Choosing social themes that are based on knowledge of
    class struggle, American imperialism and progressive politics, he
    makes films that have limited commercial appeal to the Western media.


    This year, for the first time, Guédiguian has ventured outside
    Marseilles for a story about Armenia.

    It's a touching, thought-provoking drama about a French woman doctor
    who has had little connection with her immigrant Armenian father, who
    is suffering from heart problems. Rather than undergo surgery, he
    slips away from her to his homeland to conclude his life. Her concern
    takes her to a country she knows little about, a culture and a
    history she has avoided most of her life.



    His reasoning for returning home is beyond her understanding. But the
    film makes a dramatic statement about the Armenian condition and the
    emotions that draw people back to their place of birth. The film
    `Voyage to Armenia' is not only about the trip to a country, but the
    journey one makes in life to discover true meaning and love for
    people and their culture.

    Since this film probably won't be available for quite a while, you
    can get a taste of a Guédiguian masterpiece by renting the available
    DVD `Marius and Jeanette.'

    In a revealing film about terrorism of the 1970s variety, Hans
    Joachim-Klein tells his amazing tale. `My Life as a Terrorist'
    follows the life of a member of the German radical left who joined up
    with the infamous Carlos the Jackal and became involved in the 1975
    plot to kidnap oil ministers in Vienna. The plot went awry and
    resulted in the death of three captives.

    The film points to Libya as having been implicated in the plot.
    Through a process of negotiations with the authorities - including
    the fact that he wasn't one of the actual killers - Joachim-Klein
    served a minimum sentence. After his release he went into hiding for
    many years.

    Joachim-Klein's testimony decries the senseless violence adopted by
    the radical left fringe of that era, and concludes, `From a moral
    perspective, these groups had completely hit rock bottom.'

    The soft-spoken Klein, the child of a troubled working-class family,
    shows remorse for his involvement and makes a sincere effort at
    trying to explain what drove some leftists to the extremes. As he
    retraces critical moments and places in his life in an almost
    cathartic way, the audience begins to share his newfound tranquility.


    http://www.pww.org/article/articlev iew/10310/1/351

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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