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Film Catches Life: Moviemaker Says 'My Big Armenian Family' Is About

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  • Film Catches Life: Moviemaker Says 'My Big Armenian Family' Is About

    FILM CATCHES LIFE MOVIEMAKER SAYS 'MY BIG FAT ARMENIAN FAMILY' IS ABOUT HIS
    By Joyce Rudolph

    Glendale News Press, CA
    June 11 2008

    Culture, Generation.

    Glendale resident Sevak Ohanian recreates the problems of growing up
    in an Armenian American family in his new film "My Big Fat Armenian
    Family" but adds a twist of humor.

    The film, which will premiere July 12 and 18 at Glendale High School,
    tells the story of a family of four -- a father, mother, son and
    daughter. The son can't seem to do anything right in his father's eyes,
    and there is a constant air of friction between them.

    The parents, Robert and Rima, are played by one man, Ajmin Baghramian,
    Ohanian said.

    "I decided to have Ajmin play both characters because he is just
    a phenomenal actor and good at performing caricatures of Armenian
    people," the 21-year-old filmmaker said. "Having a male actor
    masquerading as a female is innately funny. It goes back to the Greek
    comedies where men played females."

    The scenario, Ohanian said, also posed a challenge for him as the
    film's writer, director, cameraman and editor.

    "I wanted .â~@~B.â~@~B.â~@~Bto see if I could achieve this effect of
    two different characters being played by the same actor," he said. "And
    I think, if you watch the movie, you will come to identify each of
    them as their own person."

    Ohanian is studying film at UC San Diego and received some feedback
    from his independent study teacher, Michael Trigilio, a lecturer at
    the university.

    While there are some amateur qualities to the project because of
    time constraints to work on the film, Ohanian has done remarkably
    well with such a complex production, Trigilio said.

    "It's very complicated to have one actor playing the male and female
    leads," he said. "In the editing of the scenes with the two characters,
    Ohanian was able to make the editing look seamless."

    But what most impressed Trigilio was how well Ohanian crafted the
    story so it wasn't just about a farcical family, he said.

    "There is an emotional touchstone in the family dynamics and the way
    it deals with the first- and second-generation immigrant families,"
    Trigilio said. "I'm Italian American, and in our own culture there
    are generational conflicts. It's interesting to see how Sevak exposes
    a lot of the jokes that are part the Armenian community but without
    belittling the Armenian community."

    For this project, Ohanian said he wanted to combine comedy and drama
    while instilling a message in the film. What evolved was a social
    commentary on how Armenian American families behave, he said.

    "We reflect how parents act with their children and how children view
    their parents," he said.

    While it's not autobiographical, Ohanian asked his sister, Ramela
    Ohanian, 18, to play the sister in the film, he said.

    "My sister is playing herself, not literally, because it's not
    autobiographical," he said. "It's just about my culture and my
    generation."

    Ramela Ohanian has no plans for an acting a career, but said
    participating was fun.

    And she is proud of her brother's project, having written the script,
    shot, directed and edited it, she said.

    "Who can say their brother has done all that," she said. "It's
    something to look up to."

    Sevak Ohanian will enter a three-year program at USC School of Cinema
    in August and try to make filmmaking a career, he said. But for now
    he's looking forward to the public premiere in July, he said.

    "I think afterward I'll sleep for a week," he said.

    "This movie is the most challenging but rewarding thing I've ever
    committed to."

    Photo: Filmmaker Sevak Ohanian, front, sits at a Glendale home which
    was used to film much of his movie My Big Fat Armenian Family. Behind
    are three actors featured in the film (left to right) Arabo Sarkisian,
    portraying Arabo Armenian, Ajmin Baghramian, portraying Rima Armenian,
    and Narbeh Yermian, portraying Narbeh Armenian. Arabo is a cousin
    who his aunt, Rima, loves and admires while Narbeh is her son which
    she cares little about. (Alex Collins/ News-Press)

    http://www.glendalenewspress.com/arti cles/2008/06/11/entertainment/gnp-film11.txt

    --Bo undary_(ID_+1RrxYorAXS60AXEGYhSLg)--
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