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Second Armenian Film Series Premieres In Boston

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  • Second Armenian Film Series Premieres In Boston

    SECOND ARMENIAN FILM SERIES PREMIERES IN BOSTON
    Andy Turpin

    www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/05/08/second- armenian-film-series-premieres-in-boston/
    May 8, 2009

    BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.)-On Fri., May 1, the Second Annual Armenian Film
    Series premiered at the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) to large scale
    attendance by the greater Boston-area Armenian community. The Armenian
    Dramatic Arts Alliance (ADAA) presented the event.

    ADAA president Bianca Bagatourian introduced the film, saying, "It's
    so nice to see so many familiar faces... We're very happy that this
    film series fulfils the mission statement of the Armenian Dramatic
    Arts Alliance so explicitly by helping spread Armenian culture across
    the world stage."

    This is a community effort and it's really taken 10 years to get to
    this point," said Paul Boghosian, a member of the events committee
    and industrial advisory board. "Independent film is a very unique
    area. As a director, you never know if you'll get distribution or if
    anyone will go see the film. And in our ultra-technological age it
    can sometimes be easier to make the film than get it distributed."

    The evening began with the screening of "Dinner Time," a one-minute
    short by then-14-year old Gor Baghdasaryan from Armenia, the winner
    of the Unicef Prize and presented by the Tufenkian Foundation and
    the Manana Center for youth education and culture. A minute-long
    film can say a thousand words about an Armenian village family's
    quality of everyday life and cohesion in an economically distraught
    environment. And we can all look forward to great films to come as
    the now-21-year-old Baghdasaryan ages and hones his film craft.

    Next followed Eric Nazarian's feature-length film "The Blue Hour," the
    2008 winner of the Golden Apricot Prize. "The Blue Hour" is Nazarian's
    first feature film as a writer-director. Nazarian is a graduate of the
    University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television. Born
    in Armenia and raised in Los Angeles, he is currently working on a
    law enforcement saga and an international drama about globalization.

    As a film, "The Blue Hour" is hard to quantify because narratively it's
    a bit like measuring the amount of fluid in a sieve. Beautifully shot
    and exquisitely acted, "The Blue Hour" is often compared to 2006's Best
    Picture winner "Crash," but that comparison is skin-deep to both films'
    similar cinematography, sense of brooding sadness, and L.A. setting.

    In truth, "The Blue Hour" is much more akin in its sense of
    storytelling and disjointed lives to Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's 2006
    film "Babel." A shortcoming of "The Blue Hour" is the fact that anyone
    looking to find fault with the film could easily tell a friend thinking
    of seeing it that, "Yeah, it's kind of like a cross between 'Crash'
    and 'Babel' but without the race relations stuff but with Linc from
    the 'Mod Squad.'" A brief Q&A and light reception followed the event.
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