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Dissident Director'S Life To Turn Into International Movie

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  • Dissident Director'S Life To Turn Into International Movie

    DISSIDENT DIRECTOR'S LIFE TO TURN INTO INTERNATIONAL MOVIE

    Russia Today
    http://rt.com/art-and-culture/news/movie-parajanov-cannes-director-211/
    Jan 19 2012

    The rollercoaster life of Armenian film director Sergey Parajanov is
    worthy of a gripping movie plot. Adored by Fellini and Truffaut for
    his edgy and flamboyant films, he spent years locked in a GULAG for
    allegedly being gay.

    In fact he'd been imprisoned for speaking out against the stiffness
    of the Soviet regime in his movies.

    He was a man of mystery, of scandal and tragedy. But no matter
    how surrealistic his films - his real life was even more so. A new
    multi-national co-production of his life is in the works directed by
    a man who knew him.

    The film will take viewers to the places most loved by Parajanov -
    where he worked and spent most of his life: Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia
    and France. It's to be directed by fellow Armenian Serge Avedikian,
    who won the best short film prize at Cannes in 2010. He couldn't say
    no when offered the project having met and interviewed Parajanov in
    1984. Avedikian says it's as if Parajanov "prompted" him to agree to
    tell the tale of a free man who created his own world in defiance of
    the real one.

    "Charming but unbearable," according to his second wife, Sergey
    Parajanov defied the authorities for the sake of truth and good
    humour. When invited to play Karl Marx in a Soviet movie he pretended
    to nit-pick the thick beard. That was the end of his acting career.

    Sergei Parajanov was born in 1924 in Georgia, but most of his works
    were created in Ukraine. He moved there after the tragic death of his
    first wife. She had been thrown under a train by her own brothers -
    for marrying the penniless Parajanov who couldn't pay the traditional
    ransom for her.

    Parajanov was a true eccentric his dinner plate had to be arranged in
    a specific way, and there were rules for putting a cup on a table. His
    fantasy knew no borders - and so did his movies. He came to prominence
    in 1964 with the "Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors" - a story of a
    Ukrainian Romeo and Juliette in which fantasy and traditions take
    over from realism. Described as 'the greatest movie ever created'
    it caused Parajanov to fall from grace with the authorities. They
    forced him to re-edit his next surrealistic creation - "The colour
    of pomegranates" - a story of a medieval poet, told through a magic
    mix of colour, plasticity, music, it talks about love and criticised
    authorities in a disguised way.

    His politically incorrect jokes didn't go down well with the Soviet
    authorities, and he was accused of homosexual rape and spent five
    years in a prison Gulag. It was only the intervention of world famous
    film makers like Fellini, Truffaut, and Antonioni got him released.

    After a fifteen year break he got back to work in 1983 creating his
    masterpiece: "Legend of Suram Fortress".

    Sergey Parajanov died of cancer in 1990 in Armenia leaving his final
    movie "The Confession" unfinished. "My whole life I was motivated by
    jealousy", Parajanov once said, "I used to be jealous of beautiful
    people - and became charming, I was jealous of smart people and became
    unpredictable." Some say, he might have been jealous of the talented
    people - and became a genius.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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