Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Critics' Forum Article - 4.21.07

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Critics' Forum Article - 4.21.07

    Critics' Forum
    April 21, 2007

    Film
    Dark Forest of History: The Making of a Documentary
    By Hovig Tchalian

    A special edition DVD of the film, Dark Forest in the Mountains:
    Surviving the Theater of Perpetual War, has recently been released by
    Fugitive Studios. The DVD includes the documentary of the same name,
    which recounts episodes in the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict and was
    originally filmed in 1994. This re-mastered version of the original
    DVD (the first re-release won the AFFMA Awards Jury Prize in 2002)
    also includes additional footage, a journal of war photos, and a
    brief but arresting digitally animated history of Armenia.

    By far the most significant addition to the DVD, however, is the
    documentary film, Hands and a Homeland, shot by the filmmaker, Roger
    Kupelian, upon his return to Armenia a decade later, in 2004. The
    new documentary includes interviews with people involved with and
    affected by the war - soldiers, medics and surviving families with
    whom Kupelian came in contact as an embedded journalist on the front
    lines in 1994.


    By their very nature, documentaries are often fragmented, episodic.
    And Kupelian's films are, in that respect, true to the genre. The
    juxtaposition of the two films, in fact, acts as an additional
    fragmentation of sorts, allowing the later film to serve as a gloss
    on the earlier one. The result is a complex composite that
    highlights both the strengths and weaknesses of Dark Forest, raising
    in the process a number of important issues about the two films,
    their subject matter, as well as the documentary form itself.

    The 1994 film focuses primarily on the origins of the Nagorno-
    Karabagh conflict. It also documents the daily lives of the soldiers
    and families struggling through the protracted war precipitated in
    the early 1990's between the neighboring nations of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. We see original footage of the war as well
    as "portraits" of soldiers and commanders, medics and heroes,
    families and children. Interviews with scholars and historians and a
    narrative voiceover provide additional explanation and commentary.

    The first few episodes of the 1994 film are by far the most
    episodic. Together, they present the immediate background to the
    conflict. (The separate animated history places it in its larger
    historical context.) They also weave in several portraits of
    soldiers and commanding officers, including one of Garo Kahejian, a
    leader of a group of men who is reported as having been killed in
    battle, but only after being presented as, ironically, himself
    the "grandson of Genocide survivors."

    This final portrait is woven in somewhat less than deftly,
    unfortunately, leaving the impression that, in this case at least,
    what matter is less the story of Garo than its historical
    antecedent. Without immediate recourse to the animated history of
    Armenia, the viewer is surprised, almost taken aback, by the sudden
    introduction of the Genocide question at this point in the film. The
    sudden shift in focus fails to do justice to the historical irony of
    Garo's tale, allowing it to be engulfed by the enormity of the
    subject instead of presenting it as one element (albeit an important
    one) in the film's larger trajectory.

    The rest of the 1994 film and its 2004 epilogue offer a direct, and
    by and large more compelling, response to this initial moment of
    crisis. In essence, the films together try to answer the implicit
    question raised by the first - "How does one begin to speak of the
    Genocide?"


    One sequence in the episode entitled "the great game," for example,
    follows a group of soldiers planning a campaign. Kupelian carefully
    describes the struggles and vicissitudes of battle that help
    illuminate the implications of the larger conflict. Another simple
    but effective sequence presents an interview with a medic, who
    suggests that the battle for Karabagh is meant to avoid another
    forced exodus of Armenians, like the ones from Van, Mush, and
    Erzerum, in the early twentieth century.

    In perhaps the most effective sequence of all, we watch and listen to
    a father recount how, after several returns from battle unscathed,
    his son playfully accused him of having misled him about the war and
    gone off to spend time with friends instead. The father goes on to
    say that his son's curiosity about the war soon led him, along with
    his cousin, to put on their fathers' clothes and sneak off to the
    battlefront.

    Perhaps better than any other sequence in Dark Forest, this retelling
    of a true story highlights in almost novelistic fashion the difficult
    vagaries of the conflict: a son who jokes that his soldier father is
    deceiving him then proceeds to assume his father's identity and take
    matters into his own hands by heading to the battlefront. The
    episode illustrates in uncanny fashion both the father's and son's
    depth of commitment to a cause and the occasional absurdity of the
    war that united them in it. What is more, the audience is allowed to
    take in the story unfiltered, unadorned. To his credit, Kupelian
    films the father seated alone in the backseat of a car, the lens
    focused on his face, telling his tale as he knows it.

    Sequences such as these help make the second half of the 1994 film
    more convincing than the first. In the second half, the film raises
    issues more skillfully and less intrusively than in the first, less
    as weighty questions that hang over the film or intrude at
    inopportune moments than as the its true subtext, haunting its
    narrative like the duduk music that permeates so much of its span.


    The 2004 film presents a "where are they now" series of episodes in
    which, during individual interviews, the people introduced in the
    first film comment on the war, its significance, and its effect on
    their lives. Most important of all, the 2004 film presents two
    related issues that help clarify and begin to answer the questions
    raised by the 1994 film - the theme of "perpetual war" and its
    antecedent notion of a perpetual struggle for existence.

    We are told by one of the soldiers, for instance, that the 1994 truce
    between Armenia and Karabagh is no more than an illusory victory and
    that the Nagorno-Karabagh region cannot be truly independent so long
    as nations do not recognize its right to exist. And historian Levon
    Marashlian suggests that without its "symbiotic" relationship with
    Karabagh, Armenia would not survive. He adds that the historical
    example of Nakhichevan serves as a solemn reminder of what can happen
    to Karabagh, and by implication, Armenia itself. The region, which
    lies immediately south of present-day Armenia, was carved out by
    Stalin and, as a consequence, lost its entire population of
    Armenians, which at one time made up 40% of the people living there.
    Finally, Marashlian makes the explicit link between the Nagorno-
    Karabagh conflict and the Armenian Genocide of the early twentieth
    century - by killing one and a half million Armenians and thereby
    bringing the nation to the brink of extinction, he explains, the
    Ottoman Turks precipitated the desperate struggle for existence that
    has raged ever since. The comment effectively "closes the loop" with
    the one made by the medic in the 1994 film - that the struggle for
    Nagorno-Karabagh is the response to the forced exodus of Armenians
    from Van, Mush and Erzerum.


    Dark Forest in the Mountains raises long-standing and difficult
    questions about the struggle for independence, for family and for
    survival and deals with them effectively and convincingly. The film
    occasionally suffers from awkward moments but is generally well-paced
    and features skillful editing, narration, sub-titling, and
    direction. Perhaps the next iteration (in 2014?) will blend the two
    films together and find an even stronger narrative thread. But until
    then, the present version more than lives up to its name. (A brief
    mention in the DVD's animated history explains the somewhat
    mysterious origin of the film's title - Dark Forest in the Mountains
    is a loose translation of "Nagorno-Karabagh.") Despite occasionally
    losing its way, the latest version of Kupelian's film nonetheless
    skillfully navigates the dark forest of history and emerges intact.


    Roger Kupelian is a visual effects artist whose credits include Lord
    of the Rings and the recent Flags of Our Fathers. He is currently
    working on a docudrama about the legend of Vartan Mamigonian.


    All Rights Reserved: Critics Forum, 2007

    Hovig Tchalian holds a PhD in English literature from UCLA. He has
    edited several journals and also published articles of his own.

    You can reach him or any of the other contributors to Critics' Forum
    at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
    in this series are available online at www.criticsforum.org. To sign
    up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
    www.criticsforum.org/join. Critics' Forum is a group created to
    discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.
Working...
X