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Movie: A Voyage Of Self-Discovery: Daughter Follows Ailing Father To

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  • Movie: A Voyage Of Self-Discovery: Daughter Follows Ailing Father To

    A VOYAGE OF SELF-DISCOVERY: DAUGHTER FOLLOWS AILING FATHER TO ARMENIA
    By Bernard Perusse, The Gazette

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    December 15, 2006 Friday
    Final Edition

    Le Voyage en Armenie (Armenia)
    Starring: Ariane Ascaride, Gerard Meylan, Chorik Grigorian

    Playing in French and Armenian with English subtitles at: AMC cinema,
    with French subtitles at Ex-Centris.

    Parents' guide: nudity, violence.

    - - -

    Some directors throw everything at the wall in the hope that
    something will stick. Too often, that means lack of direction -
    one of filmmaking's greatest enemies. With Le Voyage en Armenie,
    Robert Guediguian (Le Promeneur du Champ de Mars) has clearly adopted
    a go-for-broke approach - and it works far more often than not.

    Mostly character drama, part thriller, with moments of comedy and
    a healthy dose of geopolitical manifesto, Guediguian's film takes
    a few missteps in its unwieldiness. On the whole, however, it's not
    only watchable, but entertaining.

    Anna (Ariane Ascaride), a rigid cardiologist, is treating her father,
    Barsam (Marcel Bluwal). When a serious heart condition is diagnosed,
    longstanding issues between the two come to the surface.

    Barsam shuns urgently needed surgery and flees to Armenia, his
    birthplace.

    A worried Anna takes off after him and finds herself in a country
    where she knows no one and does not speak the language. Encounters
    with a friendly taxi driver (Romen Avinian), a hairdresser's assistant
    who moonlights as a stripper (Chorik Grigorian) and a former general
    (Gerard Meylan), who acts as Anna's de facto protector, begin to
    change her. Within a few days, Anna is no longer so sure about her
    roots, her father or herself. Exactly as dad intended, of course.

    The top draw in Le Voyage en Armenie is Ascaride's impressive turn
    in the pivotal role, which earned her the best-actress award at
    this year's Rome Film Festival. (She also co-wrote the screenplay
    with Guediguian and Marie Desplechin). Meylan, however, is more than
    capable as her onscreen companion.

    Guediguian has filmed the Armenian countryside lovingly, making it,
    in effect, a central character.

    What doesn't work? Some oddly out-of-place narrative techniques -
    cornball voice-over flashbacks, for example - and some implausible
    plot developments, like Anna's too-casual familiarity with firearms.

    The flaws are not fatal. The voyage in the title - both a literal
    and an interior one, as it turns out - is worth taking.
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