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OTTAWA: Guides Abound On EndlessVoyage To Armenia

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  • OTTAWA: Guides Abound On EndlessVoyage To Armenia

    GUIDES ABOUND ON ENDLESSVOYAGE TO ARMENIA
    Chris Knight, The National Post

    Ottawa Citizen
    http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/a rts/story.html?id=ff70f66b-d4cb-4dd1-8f8e-66160180 2a9d
    Aug 31 2007
    Canada

    Le Voyage en Armenie *(* 1/2 Starring: Ariane Ascaride, Gerard Meylan
    ****Directed by: Robert Guediguian (In French and Armenian with English
    subtitles) Rating: 14+ Playing at: ByTowne Cinema through to Sunday

    - - -

    French-born director Robert Guediguian returns to his Armenian
    roots by making his first film in the former Soviet republic, still
    undergoing an uneasy and painful transition to a post-communist
    economy. Guediguian regular Ariane Ascaride plays Anna, a cardiologist
    from Marseilles who tells her father that he is dying and needs
    surgery.

    Miffed and/or scared, the old man decamps for his native land, even
    though he hasn't set foot there since the 1950s. Anna, on the advice
    of her husband as well as her dad's backgammon-playing chums at the
    Armenian cultural centre, sets out to find him.

    After a rare non-mocking use of the plane-flying-over-a-map effect
    (useful if, like me, you have only a vague notion of where to find
    Armenia, nestled among Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Iran), Anna
    finds herself in the country of her father and forefathers.

    A friendly old man pops up from behind the plants in her hotel lobby
    and offers to be her chauffeur. Another gives her a helicopter tour
    of the countryside, pointing out that this is where God dropped all
    the rocks He scooped out of France when He was making the world.

    (Armenia, as the film also teaches, was the first officially Christian
    nation, in AD 301, so visitors hear a lot of similar metaphors and
    are invited to visit the many fine churches.)

    Through meetings with an endless succession of patriots and viewing
    endless images of Mount Ararat (a Turkish peak, but claimed hopefully
    by Armenia), Anna starts to absorb the language, gets a haircut and
    manicure in the local style and, wouldn't you know, starts to feel
    more Armenian by the minute. She's helped along by her various guides
    who keep asking, "C'mon, don't you feel just a little Armenian? Here,
    let me show you another church ..."

    The patriotism is stirring and the landscapes starkly beautiful, but
    one can only hear heart-pounding speeches that begin "this is my home"
    so many times before the repetition starts to dull.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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