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Armenian Genocide At The Berlin Film Festival

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  • Armenian Genocide At The Berlin Film Festival

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AT THE BERLIN FILM FESTIVAL
    By Wolfgang Hobel and Alexander Smoltczyk

    Der Spiegel Online, Germany
    Feb 14 2007

    'The Lark Farm' Wakens Turkish Ghosts

    The film "The Lark Farm" is sure to stir up controversy at this year's
    Berlin Film Festival. It takes a close look at Turkey's most sensitive
    taboo -- the 1915 genocide against the Armenians. Extra security has
    been brought in for the Wednesday evening premiere.

    All that was missing at the Festival Palace was the wave cheer, given
    the level of enthusiasm with which Dieter Kosslick, the festival's
    director, staged the opening gala of the 57th Berlin International
    Film Festival last Thursday. Once again, Kosslick has managed to
    position the German capital as a world-class film city, and this
    year's Berlinale again vies with past festivals in its relentless
    determination to deliver euphoria.

    Photo Gallery: Controversial Film at the Berlin Film Festival Click
    on a picture to launch the image gallery (3 Photos) The French film
    "La Vie en rose," the first film on the festival's schedule, matched
    the effusive mood of the event. In the film, director Olivier Dahan
    tells the life story of singer Edith Piaf, sumptuously portraying
    her descent into drug addiction and disastrous love affairs. The
    president of the festival's jury Paul Schrader -- himself a writer,
    director and film critic -- has said he sees film as a kind of museum,
    or cultural memory bank. It's an interpretation that clearly applies
    to this year's festival.

    Steven Soderbergh's black-and-white drama "The Good German," provides
    a good example. George Clooney portrays an American reporter in
    post-World War II Germany who is tragically in love with a beautiful
    but mysterious woman (Cate Blanchett). The American thriller "The Good
    Shepherd," starring Angelina Jolie, Matt Damon and Alec Baldwin and
    directed by Robert De Niro, is a story about the early days of the
    CIA. In the historical drama "Die Falscher" ("The Counterfeiters"),
    Austrian director Stefan Ruzowitzky describes how inmates at the
    Nazi concentration camp in Sachsenhausen were forced to print British
    pound notes in a counterfeiting workshop.

    Taboo in Turkey

    But there is one film that will encounter little competition for
    being the most important and stirring contribution to the culture of
    reminiscence. It deals with the Turkish genocide of the Armenians, a
    topic that is still considered taboo in Turkey. Indeed, sentiments on
    the issue are so strong that representatives of the Turkish government
    are still trying to convince others to avoid the topic as well. Last
    week, for example, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul made it
    clear that relations between his country and the United States could
    be seriously jeopardized by a resolution proposed in the US Congress
    that would officially condemn the 1915 genocide committed by the Turks.

    "If this resolution is approved," Gul threatened representatives of
    the Bush administration, which is seeking a strategic partnership
    with Turkey, "why should we continue to support one another?"

    FROM THE MAGAZINE Find out how you can reprint this DER SPIEGEL
    article in your publication. Close to a century after the Armenian
    genocide, the issue remains explosive. When Turkish novelist and Nobel
    laureate Orhan Pamuk had the courage to write about the genocide, he
    was promptly taken to court by ultra-nationalists. After the murder
    of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, Pamuk, fearing for his
    own life, fled abroad.

    The Armenian genocide is sure to become a hot-button issue in Berlin
    -- home to about 250,000 Turks -- where legendary directors Paolo
    and Vittoria Taviani will premiere their new film "The Lark Farm"
    on Wednesday evening. It is a shocking film about the genocide and
    the film's distributor is nervous. The festival management, fearing
    riots, has hired additional security.

    Bundles of flesh

    It is a film filled with vivid images and meaningful gestures. In one
    scene, a Turkish soldier stands awkwardly next to an opulently set
    table. He carefully picks up the soup bowl, lifts it into the air,
    pauses for a moment, and then slowly pours the soup over the damask
    tablecloth. The horror begins with the insignificant, setting the
    stage for the unimaginable in the most polite of ways.

    In another scene, Turkish servants suddenly refuse to unload the
    truck belonging to their Armenian masters, saying that it's too
    late in the day for work. A short time later, the masters, already
    earmarked for slaughter as enemies of the people, have been reduced
    to sobbing bundles of flesh as they beg for their lives. Such is how
    genocide begins.

    In their past masterpieces, "Padre Padrone" (1977) and "Notte di
    San Lorenzo" ("The Night of San Lorenzo") (1982), Italian directors
    Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, both well into their seventies, dealt with
    the human effects of persecution and political violence -- and with
    the desire to rebel against fate. While "The Night of San Lorenzo,"
    an episode from the Italian resistance movement against Mussolini's
    fascist militia, managed to describe the senselessness of violence
    with the tools of absurdist comedy, "The Lark Farm" is a deeply
    dark melodrama.

    In the political inferno the film portrays, Moritz Bleibtreu and Paz
    Vega are perfectly cast as tragic lovers. "It is not a film against
    Turkey, on the contrary," they say, and rightfully so. But the editors
    who published the Danish cartoons that so inflamed the Muslim world
    were also in the right. "The Lark Farm" could well become the political
    scandal at this year's Berlinale.

    Obedience, cowardice, expediencey and vileness

    The screenplay, based on a novel by Antonia Arslan -- a literature
    professor who now lives in Padua -- deals with the history of Arslan's
    family. The novel portrays the Avakians, a respected middle-class
    Armenian family that lives in a provincial city, hoping that things
    will not take a turn for the worse. The film begins with intimate
    scenes of beautiful faces and women wearing long dresses, filmed
    in the light of a Vermeer painting. The family patriarch has died,
    and even the Turkish Colonel Arkan (Andre Dussollier) bows to pay
    his respects to the deceased.

    NEWSLETTER Sign up for Spiegel Online's daily newsletter and get the
    best of Der Spiegel's and Spiegel Online's international coverage in
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    But then Arkan receives his orders from Istanbul, orders he promptly
    obeys. In only a few scenes, the directors depict the mixture of
    obedience and cowardice, of expediency and vileness that has always
    made ethnic cleansing and pogroms possible.

    The men and boys are crucified, castrated and hacked to pieces, and
    the women are sent on a starvation march into the deserts of eastern
    Anatolia. Nazim, a beggar (played by Palestinian filmmaker Mohammed
    Bakri), betrays his masters but then regrets it and attempts to at
    least help the women. Youssuf (Moritz Bleibtreu), a Turkish soldier,
    is drawn to the family's proud surviving daughter (Paz Vega) and falls
    in love with her. In an attempt to flee, Nunik sacrifices herself
    to enable her nieces to escape. When Youssuf receives his orders --
    "Throw them into the fire first, then cut off their heads" -- he
    decapitates Nunik to save her from being burned alive.

    The outstanding performances -- and the sheer incomprehensibility
    of the events -- keep the film from descending into sentimentality,
    despite the costumes and the over-abundance of stage blood. The
    Tavianis have managed to produce images the film's viewers will regret
    having seen, because these are the kinds of images one has trouble
    forgetting. This is both the film's achievement and its curse.

    Watching the film is almost unbearable. According to some eyewitnesses,
    soldiers gave Armenian mothers the option of killing their newborn
    boys themselves. Others say that women were forced to place their
    babies in a rucksack and stand back-to-back with another woman,
    their arms interlocked and... One doesn't want to know or see what
    actually happened.

    A muffled silence

    This is what Vittorio Taviani has to say about it: "The murder of
    the innocent has been a part of theater history since the Greeks,
    since Shakespeare. Three years ago we discovered the Armenian tragedy,
    almost by accident, when we read the book by Antonia Arslan. We wanted
    to tell it with the means at our disposal."

    Arsinee Khanjian, a Canadian of Armenian heritage who lost part of
    her own family, plays the role of Armineh Avakian. In one scene the
    severed head of her husband is thrown into her lap. "She was adamant
    about acting in our film. She felt that it was a sort of obligation
    to her murdered great-grandparents. We promised her that we would
    only shoot this scene once, and without rehearsal," says Paolo
    Taviani. "According to the script, she was supposed to scream. But
    all that came out was a muffled silence. We left it that way."

    The Armenians were Christians, often educated and affluent. As such,
    they made for the ideal fifth column when the Ottoman Empire attacked
    Russia. But the Ottomans lost the war. According to the official
    version in Ankara, the Armenians had to be resettled during the war,
    and most of them died as a result of disease and at the hands of
    Kurdish tribes. But many contest that version.

    "One million Armenians were murdered. This is something hardly anyone
    dares to say," said Orhan Pamuk prior to his winning the Nobel Prize in
    Literature. His words immediately made Pamuk the victim of nationalist,
    hate-mongering propaganda. The persecution and murder of the Armenian
    minority remains the foremost trauma of the founding of modern Turkey.

    It was, in fact, the "young Turks," those who were eager to found a
    new and modern state, who issued the orders which led to the deaths
    of the Armenians. Recognizing the genocide as such would be tantamount
    to admitting that the spiritual founders of modern Turkey were men who
    today would be easily convicted of war crimes by the International War
    Crimes Tribunal in The Hague. And yet the majority of officers charged
    with crimes against the Armenians were promptly released after the war.

    Efforts in vain

    For the past 70 years, Hollywood studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has had
    plans to film the Armenian epic "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh," by
    Czech-born poet, playwright and novelist Franz Werfel. And Sylvester
    Stallone has likewise recently indicated he would be interested
    in making the movie. But the project was repeatedly shelved for
    political reasons. Keeping NATO's eastern flank happy was apparently
    more important that bringing justice to a minority that had already
    been heavily decimated.

    Even today the European Union avoids using the word "genocide,"
    anxious not to cast a shadow on the negotiations over Turkey's bid
    for EU membership.

    The film is an Italian-French-Bulgarian-Spanish co-production.

    Turkey's delegate to the European film fund Eurimage attempted to
    put a stop to the Taviani project. But this time Turkey's efforts
    were in vain.

    Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

    http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiege l/0,1518,466427,00.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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