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Ararat: 14 Views

Armenia, Germany, Netherlands

2007

75 Min
Color
Armenian
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DIR Don Askarian

PROD Don Askarian, Nune Hovhannissian

SCR Don Askarian, Ivan Bunin, Alexander Delphinov

DP Don Askarian, Nune Hovhannissian, Sargis Kharazyan

CAST Mikael Vatinyan, Artak Poghosyan, Sergey Tovmasyan, Karen Mirighanyan, Suzzan Avetisyan, Don Askarian, Ohan Askaryan, Nune Hovhannissian

Rotterdam (Themes: Maestros: Kings & Aces)

Synopsis

A series of controlled improvisations. They focus on the holy Armenian mountain Ararat that is out of reach in Turkey. The filmmaker looks at his mountain as a poet, a dancer, a painter. And of course, eventually also as a filmmaker. Ararat is a holy mountain for Armenians. According to Biblical tradition, Noah saw the first land here again after the Great Flood. So it is difficult for Christian Armenians that the mountain is just over the border in Islamic Turkey. They can only look at it. That is also what Don Askarian does with great dedication and using all his visual inventiveness. Askarian worked for at least five years on this film, which is hard to label. It is not a drama or a documentary and it can’t be put in the tradition of the experimental film – for that he puts up too much resistance to what we now understand as ‘modern’. Whatever, the film maker studies his mountain from every conceivable angle, just as the great French painter Cézanne once studied Mont Sainte-Victoire, or like the equally great Japanese print maker Hokusai studied Mount Fuji. Askarian improvises on his fourteen views in such a monitored and imaginative way that a new reality seems to emerge. A reality that seems to float between magic and truth and wants to shirk time and space. The view of Askarian, or maybe rather his vision, of the mountain is deeply rooted in Armenian culture. A culture that had to be fought for in a tragic history. The film makes this tangible too. This beautiful mountain has experienced a lot. Seen a lot. Before and after the Great Flood. (GjZ). —IFFR

Director

Original

Don Askarian

Don Askarian was born in Stepanakert, Nagorno Karabakh. In 1967 he went to Moscow and studied history and art. He worked as an assistant-director and film critic for a year after his study. In 1975-1977 Don Askarian was imprisoned. In 1978 he emigrated from the USSR to West Berlin. For the last 25 years he has lived and worked in Germany, The Netherlands and in Armenia, where he founded his own film companies. He is a prize-winner at several international film festivals.

In 1996, Don Askarian published his book The Dangerous Light. Every year the interest to his unique films grow up. More and more film festivals come to honor Don Askarian with retrospectives. Serious TV-stations like ARD, WDR, ZDF, Channel 4, Arte, but also Belgian, Greek, Swiss, Slovakian, Armenian etc. TV Channels are constant co-producers and buyers of all his films. The films of Don Askarian were sold and broadcast world wide about 80 times. Don Askarian, honored with a Harvard Film Archive retrospective… read more

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