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Making Their Voices Heard: Screamers

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  • Making Their Voices Heard: Screamers

    Washington Post, DC
    Jan 26 2007


    Making Their Voices Heard
    Friday, January 26, 2007; Page WE34


    Rife with rotting corpses, severed heads and massacred children,
    "Screamers" is one of the most horrifying movies I've ever seen.
    Sadly, it's a documentary, not a slasher flick. A strident reckoning
    on a century of genocide, the film exhumes a Turkish campaign to
    exterminate Armenians in 1915, then casts a baleful eye on
    preventable slaughters up to the current ethnic cleansing in Darfur.
    But sadly, too, its call to action is somewhat undermined by unsubtle
    artistry.

    "Screamers" isn't easy to watch, and not entirely because of its
    content. There is much ear-hammering heavy metal music and
    full-throated screaming, courtesy of the band System of a Down, whose
    members are Armenian American. The film is mainly their story -- part
    history lesson, part political broadside, part concert travelogue --
    with unwieldy results. Oral accounts from now-frail Armenian
    survivors and witnesses don't quite mix with strobe lights,
    headbanging fans and tour-bus antics.


    Teamed with filmmaker Carla Garapedian (also Armenian American), the
    band is out to make the Turkish government own up to a "wild orgy of
    blood" (as one witness wrote to President Woodrow Wilson) after
    decades of denial. Most engaging in its second half, the documentary
    also indicts U.S. and British political leadership for failing to
    officially use the word "genocide" in connection with the deaths of
    as many as 1.5 million Armenians. Persistent vows of "never again"
    ring shamefully hollow in the abattoirs of Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.

    The film paraphrases a quote from Hitler before he invaded Poland in
    1939 (a quote still in hot dispute): "Who still speaks nowadays of
    the extermination of the Armenians?"

    This documentary does. Whatever its flaws, that alone makes it worth
    seeing.


    -- Richard Leiby

    Screamers R, 91 minutes Contains graphic gore, disturbing images and
    profanity. At AMC Hoffman Center.
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