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Film Review: Screamers

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  • Film Review: Screamers

    Newsday, NY
    Jan 25 2007

    SCREAMERS
    Rafer GuzmÁn

    January 26, 2007

    SCREAMERS (R).

    With Angelina visiting Africa and Bono battling AIDS, you might think
    the rock band System of a Down is hopping on the charity bandwagon
    with "Screamers," a documentary that uses concert footage to draw
    attention to genocide around the world. But the band's four members,
    all Armenian-Americans, have long been pushing for a very specific
    and personal goal: to persuade the U.S. government to officially
    recognize the 1915 Armenian massacre, at the hands of Ottoman Turks,
    as genocide.

    That semantic nicety - was it genocide, or mere slaughter? - is a
    major issue for modern-day Turkey, which basically denies the 1915
    atrocities and occasionally persecutes those who beg to differ. (Last
    week a Turkish newspaper editor who challenged the official position
    was shot dead outside his office.) Those who raise their voices about
    genocide are nicknamed "screamers" in this movie, and the term could
    also apply to the wild-eyed members of System of a Down. Singer Serj
    Tankian, however, is refreshingly soft-spoken offstage: He's as
    gentle with his 96-year-old grandfather (a 1915 survivor) as he is
    with former House Speaker Dennis Hastert.

    The film operates at a high-school reading level: Whenever
    discussions get too deep, director Carla Garapedian quickly switches
    to System of a Down thundering away before a sea of fists. But if
    "Screamers" can turn a few head-bangers into brain users, it will
    have achieved a noble goal.

    --Boundary_(ID_djTi8xsfS9kFWGe9pPhsqg)--
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