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  • "My films are perhaps worse than Parajanov's films, but they are not

    "My films are perhaps worse than Parajanov's films, but they are not
    Parajanov." Roman Balayan

    May 27 2014


    On May 25, the premier of the Armenian version of the film director
    Samvel Saribekyan's (Samo Spiuni) documental film "Flying Angels.
    Roman Balayan" was showed at the Theatre named after Henrik Malyan.
    The Russian version was shown earlier, in 2011, at the "Moscow"
    cinema. The film tells the story of Ukrainian-resident famous Armenian
    film director Roman Balayan's creative years, which becomes more
    comprehensive and impressive through the memories and opinions of his
    friends, colleagues, well-known actors, and film directors. The film
    especially gives a great place to Balayan's film "Flights in Dreams
    and in Reality", which Samo Spiuni explained by its actuality, and by
    two more factors. First, when shooting his "Flying Angels. Roman
    Balayan" film, 30 years of the "Flights" was marked, and secondly, as
    said by Spiuni, Balayan has become famous by this film. "Becoming free
    from Soviet stereotypes, he created the character of an individual.
    Film Director Karen Shahnazarov says that the hero of the film is a
    useless person, simply a rejected because he does not agree with all
    that is happening around him, and expresses his fiery and unconscious
    protest by not so adequate behavior. There are a lot of rejected
    people now, and this is one of the reasons that I have devoted a large
    section to that film," detailed Spiuni, in the conversation with
    Aravot.am, and added that the end of the "Flights" is very symbolic
    for him. "In the last episode, the film director is burying the
    staring hero in a haystack, where he curls up, accepting the position
    of an embryo, is crying in the feeling of his rebirth. In my opinion,
    this is the story of Small Meher from "Daredevils of Sassoun" when the
    film's hero, entering into a haystack, closes himself like Meher was
    closing himself in Agravakar," said our interlocutor. Later, the
    "Flying Angels. Roman Balayan" film is telling about Balayan's other
    films, in short references, "Biryuk", "Save me my talisman", "Birds of
    Paradise" and so on. In the film, Balayan confesses S. Parajanov's
    great influence in his creative life, "If coming to Kiev, I had not
    met with Parajanov, I could have become a film director, but what kind
    of film director. I do not know. However, faced with such a giant, I
    was under his influence for a long time, but my colleagues know that
    I'm probably the only one that was able to get free from this
    influence. Parajanov liked my thesis film, the "Thief," very much, but
    I do not like it because it is completely Parajanov. Then I was able
    to slip out of this influence. My films perhaps are worse than
    Parajanov films but they are not Parajanov," says R. Balayan. In S.
    Spiuni film, R. Balayan talks also about his decision on leaving
    Armenia and living in Ukraine, as well as why he does not shoot an
    Armenian film. "After graduating from the Institute of Theater in
    Kiev, I came to Yerevan to shoot my thesis, but I was refused. I had
    also works that I wanted to shoot, but all of them were rejected, and
    I returned to Kiev. And every time visiting Armenia and Artsakh, the
    journalists are always asking the same question whether I do not want
    to shoot an Armenian film. When I was already recognized, the Armenian
    studio was constantly suggesting me, but I was now rejecting," tells
    the film director. And in the end of the film devoted to him, he
    speaks about the clash between the Armenian art and reality. "Why
    don't Armenians and Jews take "aspirin"?, he asks, because they do not
    want the pain to go away, and more seriously, I want the Armenian
    children's eyes be bright, bold, even impertinent; I want the traces
    of Genocide be disappeared from the eyes of our children. For example,
    when living in Armenia, I have seen how the Armenians are joking from
    morning till evening, telling jokes, whereas there is always grief and
    pathos in the art."

    Siranush HAYRAPETYAN

    Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2014/05/27/165434/

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