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  • Paradjanov and Armenian Cinema news

    Mozart Entertainment
    Post Office Box 17257
    Beverly Hills, California 90209 US
    http://www.parajanov.com
    [email protected]

    In the review of Darren Aronofsky's film, The Fountain, Jeremy Osgood
    wrote the following in his funny-titled article Dude. Like, Where's
    the Script which was published in the The Pulse "...it demonstrates
    too much faith in the beauty of his images. There is, of course, a
    place for purely visual cinema. It is a place filled by the likes of
    Parajanov and Reggio who produce work that is stunning..."
    Incidentally, Godfrey Reggio had recently received the Parajanov Award
    at the Golden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival in Armenia.

    Martin Vardanov's Erased Faces II has been postponed again, now till
    2007, due to difficulties with getting the clips of Mikhail Vartanov's
    films out of Armenia. In 2007, Vartanov turns 70, Parajanov: The Last
    Spring turns 15 and and a few celebrations are planned in Europe, US
    and, hopefully, Armenia. It is hoped that these events will help bring
    more attention to the very little known master and his oeuvre which
    has been suppressed for decades and till this day virtually never been
    shown to the general public.

    In Bucharest, Romania, Sergei Paradjanov's Color of Pomegranates and
    Hagop Hovnatanian as well as Atom Egoyan's Ararat were screened in
    November during Days of Armenian Cinema. The latter film is about the
    Armenian Genocide perpetrated by Turkish government in 1915. On a
    related note, Sylvester Stallone told Denver Post that he had always
    wanted to make a film about the Armenian Genocide based on Franz
    Werfel's famous novel 40 Days of Musa Dagh: "...an epic about the
    complete destruction of a civilization...The Turks have been killing
    that subject for 85 years."

    In Armenia, an exhibition dedicated to the 200th anniversary of Hagop
    Hovnatanian opened on Wednesday at the National Library of Armenia.

    Congratulations to the creators of the documentary Screamers for
    winning the AFI Los Angeles International Film Festival's Audience
    Award for Best Documentary.

    Festival International du Film d'Amiens, which took place 10 - 19
    November 2006, screened Sergei Paradjanov's Color of Pomegranates and
    Amo Bek-Nazarov's silent Zangezur.

    Mohammed Shine of Kerala, India recently wrote in his blog that Kamara
    Kamalova's new movie Road Under the Skies' "...surreal scenes of
    colourful but abstract local mythology smacks of the master Sergei
    Paradjanov..."

    In France, La Cinémathèque de Toulouse begins a retrospective of
    Armenian films, called Fragments d'Arménie on 1 Januray 2007. During
    the month of January all post 1964 films of Sergei Paradjanov will be
    screened along with the work of Amo Bek-Nazarov, Atom Egoyan, Bagrat
    Oganesyan, Albert Lazarian as well as Artavazd Pelechian's We and
    Seasons.

    Robert Kelly wrote the following in his paper presented at the
    Princeton Conference on Magic and Cinema: "Interesting that throughout
    the government direction of the arts in the USSR, film found its way
    to magic and wonder only through treatment of folklore. The same route
    that the German Romantics had followed to escape the inexorable
    rationality of the Enlightenment became the way through the
    penny-plain austerities of Socialist Realism and beyond into splendor
    - the work of Parajanian/Parajanov, the great Armenian-Russian
    director contains magnificent examples of this liberation."
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