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  • Return of The Native?

    RETURN OF THE NATIVE?
    Armenian Exile (The Movie) Review
    BY RICHARD HODGINS
    http://www.armenianexilethemovie.com/


    Ho rizon Weekly, September 21, 2009
    Asbarez.com September 11, 2009
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/09/11/armenian-ex ile-the-movie-review/


    Armenian Exile is the least political product of Hagop Goudsouzian?s
    obsession with diaspora identity. Exile is almost entirely free of any
    reference to the genocide, of lament for the great loss, of the demand
    for justice. Instead, its focus on the personal in the here and now is
    all the more affecting for such avoidance. And, paradoxically, this
    method makes it even more politically meaningful for non-Armenians
    like myself.

    Exile is not about how much has been scoured away but, rather, how
    much has remained beneath a culture?s feet. Every stone still counts.
    A Belgian archaeologist in Exile reminds us of as much when she
    uncovers a 5,000-year-old artifact among the thousands of stone
    markers at one burial site. The artifact and every one of those stones
    mark the continuity of an Armenia from pre-history to the present. But
    did you have to be there to get it? No. That?s what we have guys like
    Goudsouzian for.

    ?What do you think of people like me who come here to search for
    their roots?? Goudsouzian asks Armenians in their homeland. The
    question seems overly self-conscious at first, but it turns out to be
    exactly the right one. From simple farmers to some of the country?s
    leading artists and artisans, Armenians answer the question not just
    with disarming candor but with a surprising finality for the diaspora
    Armenian.

    It?s time to admit that I?m no big fan of identity issues for any
    culture. They so often end up lethal for someone. Whenever I?m drawn
    into a discussion of how much we?d lose if we were all the same, I say
    it?s better to be boring and alive than interesting and dead. But,
    unfortunately, every generation seems to be cursed to live in
    interesting times. Cultural identity seems to be the only option for
    so many oppressed groups to preserve their vitality against future
    need. Still, I make very few exceptions for cultural or nationalistic
    sentiment. The Armenians are one exception. I wouldn?t excuse the
    preoccupation with identity if the vitality of the culture in question
    weren?t something I believed to be special well beyond the customary
    condescensions ?we? bestow. I believe Exile itself is and will remain
    an important artifact of that self-same Armenian vitality for some
    time to come.

    There?s a certain easy movement, from what could be the compulsory
    cultural comfort food to some, to big hefty ideas for others, in
    Armenian Exile that one can never decide may be directorial cunning or
    just dumb luck. For example, Exile begins with Goudsouzian and his
    driver getting lost on their way to Saint Asdvadzazin Church. Why has
    the driver become lost? He apologizes to Goudsouzian that he is
    confused because he only ever walks to Saint Asdvadzazin. He knows
    where he is when he can feel his Armenia beneath his feet. Every stone
    counts. The paving stones in front of Saint Asdvadzazin, when we get
    there, will be where we get our first good bearings. Obviously they?re
    not just physical bearings. Exile is all about orientation and
    Goudsouzian?s skill is in showing us that getting lost and then found
    is just the way things unfold in Armenia.

    Goudsouzian?s personal quest for his Armenian identity gradually
    fades into a metaphorical shadow as the people of Armenia eloquently
    prove that the diaspora Armenian, however many generations or nations
    removed, may have as little problem finding a spiritual locus for his
    identity as the indigenous Armenian does his physical one. In that way
    Armenian Exile is, paradoxically again, pretty much free of the idea
    of exile altogether. The Armenian exile is someone who can only be
    away; he or she can never be gone.

    Another confession: talking about how thoughtful Armenian Exile is
    has let me escape how moving it often is as well. I?ll have to leave
    that to you. The DVD is available from www.ArmenianExileTheMovie.com,
    where you can also see a trailer.

    http://www.armenianexilethemovie.com/tex t/trailer.htm
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