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Screamers: System Of A Down Review

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  • Screamers: System Of A Down Review

    SCREAMERS: SYSTEM OF A DOWN REVIEW
    By Brian Tallerico

    ugo.com, NY
    Feb 10 2007

    There are very few films that you can point to and say, "That might
    actually have an impact on the world." As much as you love The
    Hills Have Eyes, irradiated cannibal hillbillies aren't really big
    on inspiring cultural or political change. However, as lofty as it
    sounds, Screamers is a rock documentary about the metal band System
    of a Down that has the potential to foster change through education.

    Ideally, knowledge leads to action and, just like the people who
    go to see System of a Down in concert or listen closely to their
    lyrics, the documentary about the band's pursuit of answers about
    the Armenian genocide has the potential to change the world or, at
    the very least, make its citizens a little more informed. It's not a
    perfect documentary, but you won't see many films with as important
    a subject because Screamers isn't just about the breast-flashing fans
    of System of a Down, it's about something far more intense.

    The first scene of Carla Garapedian's concert documentary defines the
    title, and it's not a reference to that drunk guy who kept yelling
    "Free Bird" at the last rock show you went to. A "screamer" is someone
    who has become so knowledgeable about genocide that all they can do
    is scream. They have fully taken in and wrapped their head around the
    unspeakable horror and, now, they need to be heard. As human beings,
    we have a hard time comprehending genocide. When the news reports
    that a family of four has died, we know exactly what that means and
    can relate. When we hear that hundreds of thousands of people are
    being massacred in Darfur, it's hard to even know how to respond to
    something that massive. Screamers isn't didactic; it doesn't tell
    you how to respond. It just wants you to know and to ask questions.

    The four members of System of a Down, the band behind such huge hits
    as "Chop Suey!", "Toxicity", and "Aerials", are Armenian. In 1915,
    the government of Turkey decided to eradicate the Armenian population
    in their country, which led to the death of over a million people.

    The genocide was never officially recognized by the global community,
    with the Turks claiming that the deaths were simply World War I
    causalities or had been over-exaggerated. This lack of responsibility
    or recognition actually led Adolf Hitler to comment that no one
    remembered the Armenians and so no one might remember the Jews he
    was planning to kill. Screamers makes a solid case that lack of world
    recognition or involvement in one genocide only gives people in power
    the freedom to commit those same atrocities again, and that we can draw
    a very solid line of consequences from Turkey to Germany all the way
    through Iraq, Rwanda, and, now, the Sudan. In the documentary, lead
    singer Serk Tankian and the rest of System use their music, concerts,
    and influence to try and get the Armenian genocide recognized and,
    through education, possibly change the course of future brutalities.

    Screamers jumps back-and-forth frequently, splicing scenes from a
    System of a Down concert with the band discussing their Armenian
    histories and historical information about the genocide. The mix
    doesn't always work, and some of the technical direction in the concert
    footage is sadly lacking. At one point, we actually go from System
    playing a great song at one venue to a few minutes of "educational
    footage" to the band playing the SAME song at another venue. That's
    just silly. And if you know you're not into System of a Down's music,
    don't bother with Screamers, because you'll hear whole songs in their
    entirety. But if you're a fan or just a music appreciator with an
    open mind, don't be surprised if this documentary lets you learn
    something while rocking out.
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