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Peleshyan's Secret Is In Being Genius: Pietro Marcello

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  • Peleshyan's Secret Is In Being Genius: Pietro Marcello

    PELESHYAN'S SECRET IS IN BEING GENIUS: PIETRO MARCELLO

    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/725683/peleshyan%E2%80%99s-secret-is-in-being-
    genius-pietro-marcello.html
    09:45, 11 July, 2013

    YEREVAN, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS: The documentary film, telling about the
    life and activities of the Armenian renowned film director
    Artavazd Peleshyan, Peleshyan's Silence is among the documentaries
    presented at the 10th Golden Apricot Yerevan
    International Film Festival. As the Armenpress correspondent was
    reported by the director of the film Pietro Marcello, Peleshyan's
    Silence portrays a memory - a memory of his films and of their
    creation, a memory of cinema and of its relation with mankind, with
    its life, its mind, its emotions and with the unceasing, endless
    paths that intertwine one with the other. According to him, seeing
    the
    Artavazd Peleshyan's films for the first time years ago, Pietro
    Marcello understood that Peleshyan is the master of his work for
    the different generations of film producers. "I consider Peleshyan
    to be one of my teachers. I met with him in Moscow. I think I have
    done my best in the film, presenting it not as a film but the
    Peleshyan's portrait", - said the director of the film Pietro
    Marcello.

    "In reality there are no secrets in his silence. Peleshyan is a
    great film director, a great genius. His secret is in his being a
    genius", -
    said Pietro Marcello. He told that after seeing Peleshyan he wanted
    to come to Armenia very much and has done it in the framework of the
    10th Golden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival.

    Pietro Marcello is impressed by the Golden Apricot and considers it
    to be a wonderful festival. The world premiere of the Peleshyan's
    Silence documentary took place in September 2011.

    The film was rewarded with a special award of the Armenia's National
    Film Center at Hayak Awards in 2013 and was presented at different
    film festivals. On July 10 the Peleshyan's Silence was screened at
    the Tumo Center for Creative Technologies.

    On July 11 at 19:30 at the Red Hall of the Moscow Cinema the
    retrospective screening of Artavazd Peleshyan's films will be
    presented.

    Artavazd Ashoti Peleshyan (born February 22, 1938, Leninakan) is an
    Armenian director of film-essays, a documentarian in the history of
    film art, and a film theorist. However, his work, unlike Maya
    Deren's, is neither avant-garde, nor does it try to explore the
    absurd. It is also
    not really art for art's sake, like the work of Stan Brakhage, for
    instance, but is generally acknowledged, rather, as a poetic view of
    life
    transferred onto film.

    In the words of the filmmaker Sergei Parajanov, Peleshyan is "one of
    the few authentic geniuses in the world of cinema".

    He is renowned for developing a style of cinematographic perspective
    known as distance montage, combining perception of depth with
    oncoming entities, such as running packs of antelope or hordes of
    humans. He has always made extensive use of archive footage, mixed in
    with his own shots, with fast inter-cutting between the two.

    Telephoto lenses are often used to get "candid camera" shots of
    people
    engaging in mundane tasks.

    His films are on the border between documentary and feature, somewhat
    reminiscent of the work of such avant-garde filmmakers as Bruce
    Connor, rather than of conventional documentaries. Most of his films
    are short, ranging from a mere 6 minutes long up to about 60 minutes
    long. They feature no dialogue. However, music and sound effects play
    nearly as important a role in his films as the visual images in
    contributing towards the artistic whole. Nearly all of his films were
    shot in black and white.

    His early films, made he was still a student at VGIK, were awarded
    several prizes. To date, 12 films by Peleshyan are known to exist.

    The
    Beginning (Skizbe) (1967) is a cinematographical essay about the
    October Revolution of 1917. One of the unique visual effects used in
    this
    film is achieved by holding snippets of film still on a single frame,
    then advancing only for a second or two before again pausing on
    another, resulting in a stuttering visual effect. Other important
    films by him are We (Menq) (1967, a poetically told history of
    Armenia and
    its people, and Inhabitant (Obitateli) (1970), a reflection on the
    relationship between wildlife and humans. Artavazd Peleshyan's most
    brilliant film is considered, by many critics, to be The Seasons of
    the Year (1975). Exquisitely shot by cinematographer Mikhail
    Vartanov, it
    is an outstanding look at the contradiction and harmony between
    humans and nature. It was the last collaboration between Peleshyan
    and
    Vartanov, Armenia's two most important documentary auteurs; they
    first worked together on The Autumn Pastoral (1971).

    Peleshyan is also the author of a range of theoretical works, such as
    his 1988 book, Moyo kino (My Cinema).

    Being from a country far away from internationally significant cinema
    circles, Peleshyan's efforts were not properly recognized by critics
    of world cinema until very recently. Since the fall of the Soviet
    Union, he has been able to make two more short films, Life (1993) and
    The
    End (1994). He is now living in Moscow. His most recent film was
    edited at the ZKM | Karlsruhe Film Institute in 2005-2006 and has not
    yet
    been released.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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