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Wide-ranging stories in Armenian fest

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  • Wide-ranging stories in Armenian fest

    Boston Globe, MA
    April 26 2009


    Wide-ranging stories in Armenian fest


    The Armenian Film Festival returns for its second annual engagement
    May 1 through 3 at the Museum of Fine Arts, celebrating Armenian
    culture, language, and filmmakers through documentaries, dramas, and
    comedies. The festival opens with a screening of "The Blue Hour" by
    Eric Nazarian, a story of loss and hope encountered by several
    strangers in Los Angeles.

    Other film highlights include "Float," a "dramatic comedy" about the
    lives of an ice cream parlor owner and his family. "Autumn," tells the
    story of a man's struggle to rebuild his life after being a political
    prisoner for 10 years, and four documentaries by beloved French
    filmmaker Serge Avedikian will also be screened, including "We Drank
    the Same Water," about the tense relationship between Armenians and
    Turks, and Avedikian's efforts to help them reconcile. The fanciful
    drama "Mermaid," by director Anna Melikyan, tells the story of a
    green-haired girl who takes a vow of silence after her mother refuses
    to enroll her in ballet class, and discovers she has the power to make
    wishes come true.

    Tickets: $8 members, seniors, and students; $10 general
    admission. Matinees: $6 members, seniors, students; $7 general
    admission weekdays until 5 p.m., weekends until 12:30
    p.m. 617-369-3306, www.mfa.org/film

    "Yellow Earth" by Chen Kaige will be presented by the Harvard Film
    Archive on April 27 at 7 p.m., in honor of the film's 25th
    anniversary. Harvard Professor Eugene Wang will introduce the film,
    which marked a breakthrough of new Chinese cinema in the 1980s, and
    has remained a signature piece of the so-called Fifth Generation of
    filmmakers.

    "Yellow Earth" is a story of an army "art worker" in search of rural
    folk songs in northwestern China, and invokes elements of classical
    Chinese aesthetics through modern cinema. The film thrust director
    Kaige, as well as cinematographer Zhan Yimou, into international
    stardom.

    Tickets: $8 general admission; $6 seniors, non-Harvard students,
    faculty, and staff; free for Harvard students. Tickets will go on sale
    45 minutes prior to showtime. 617-495-4700, www.hcl.harvard.edu/hfa

    RACHEL ZARRELL

    http://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/ 2009/04/26/wide_ranging_stories_in_armenian_fest/
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