Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sylvester Stallone's Dream To Produce 40 Days Of Musa Dagh

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

  • Sylvester Stallone's Dream To Produce 40 Days Of Musa Dagh

    SYLVESTER STALLONE'S DREAM TO PRODUCE 40 DAYS OF MUSA DAGH

    Armenpress
    Dec 20 2006

    YEREVAN, DECEMBER 20, ARMENPRESS" In an interview with Denver Post
    actor Sylvester Stallone said one of his dreams was to to create an
    epic, and the book that intrigues him is Franz Werfel's 'The Forty
    Days of Musa Dagh,' detailing the Turkish genocide of its Armenian
    community in 1915.

    "French ships eventually rescued some Armenians, and Stallone has
    his favorite scene memorized: 'The French ships come, and they've
    dropped the ladders and everybody has climbed up the side. The ships
    sail. The hero, the one who set up the rescue, has fallen asleep,
    exhausted, behind a rock on the slope above. The camera pulls back,
    and the ships and the sea are on one side, and there's one lonely
    figure at the top of the mountain, and the Turks are coming up the
    mountain by the thousands on the far side.' "Talk about a political
    hot potato. The Turks have been killing that subject for 85 years,"
    the super star added.

    The Forty Days of Musa Dagh is a 1934 novel by Austrian-Jewish author
    Franz Werfel based around an event that took place on Musa Dagh
    in 1915 during the Armenian Genocide in Turkey. The Forty Days of
    Musa Dagh achieved great international success and has been credited
    with awakening the world to the evidence of the persecution of the
    Armenians.

    The novel is a fictionalized account based on the real-life defense
    of Musa Dagh's Damlayik by Armenians who were facing systematic
    deporatations and massacres put into effect by the government of
    Young Turks.

    Although written as a novel, the historical background content of
    the book has generally been accepted as fact. In the 1930s Turkey
    pressured the United States State department to prevent MGM Studios
    to produce a film based on the novel.

    A filmed version of the story was eventually made independently and
    was released theatrically in 1982.
Working...
X