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  • Growing Up in a Trouble Spot

    Growing Up in a Trouble Spot
    By Anna Malpas

    Moscow Times, Russia
    June 23 2006

    Moscow International Film Festival

    "The Lighthouse" was shot on location in Armenia.

    Passengers at an Armenian train station in Maria Saakyan's film "The
    Lighthouse" are confronted with a handwritten sign saying "there is
    no train." Ironically, the director had the same problem when she
    traveled from Moscow to shoot the wistful war drama on location.

    "During the war, they took apart the rails and never put them
    together again," the 25-year-old director said after a press
    screening of her film at Mosfilm on Wednesday. That made transporting
    camera equipment to Armenian mountain villages "very expensive," she
    said.

    The film, which is taking part in the Perspectives section of the
    Moscow International Film Festival, is the debut feature for Saakyan,
    a graduate of Moscow's VGIK film school. Its story of a girl visiting
    her grandparents in Armenia, then finding herself unable to leave
    because of war, is one that is close to the director, who fled her
    native Yerevan at age 12.

    "That little piece of earth is very dear to me," she said, recalling
    that when her family left Armenia in the 1990s, she begged them to
    let her stay. "I don't know whether I managed to convey that feeling,
    that emotion, at least a little bit."

    While she talked, her young daughter pleaded with her for candy, and
    Saakyan spoke of her feeling that she would never return to live in
    Armenia. "Now, I realize that I can't go back because I already have
    my family here, I had my education here. ... I have opportunities to
    work here."

    The film's screenwriter, 27-year-old VGIK student Givi Shavgulidze,
    drew on similar experiences, since he was forced to leave Abkhazia in
    the early 1990s. "He can't get back to his house at all because now
    there are other people living there," Saakyan said.

    "The Lighthouse" remains vague about which Caucasus conflict it
    depicts, although its apparent subtext is the war between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Saakyan
    stressed that the story was not about a specific war. "In the 1990s,
    there was a war in Georgia, there was a war in Armenia. ... The whole
    of the former Soviet Union was covered in hot spots."

    The film stars veteran actors as Armenian villagers, including Sofiko
    Chiaureli, who acted in Sergei Paradzhanov's "Color of Pomegranates,"
    and Sos Sarkisyan, who played a doctor in "Solaris" by Andrei
    Tarkovsky. "They all agreed very quickly when they heard what the
    film was about," the director said. "They also care about this
    theme."

    The film received a grant from the Netherlands-based Hubert Bals
    Fund, which supports up-and-coming filmmakers as part of the
    Rotterdam film festival. It is the first full-length film for
    Saakyan, who previously made an almost wordless short called "The
    Farewell" that won several festival awards. She described "The
    Lighthouse" as her "first attempt to work with words and a little bit
    with history."

    "The Lighthouse" plays Mon. at 6 p.m. and Tues. at 6 p.m. at Oktyabr,
    located at 24 Novy Arbat. Metro Smolenskaya.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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