My Armenian Phantoms (2025) Movie Script
When I was little,
during the Soviet Union,
I adored Thursday evenings.
Everyone gathered together
around the TV
for an evening of Armenian films.
The screen was grey before 8pm.
At 8pm, the film would start!
It's strange.
Visions I did not expect.
A moment in the shadow,
under the light.
Follow me
on a journey into the past,
in the footsteps of Armenian cinema.
My Armenian Phantoms
A film by Tamara Stepanyan
I can remember
dreaming of being a pioneer,
tying the small red neckerchief...
But my dream didn't come true.
My brother had the neckerchief,
My cousin had it too.
I was very jealous of them.
I remember that.
People always gathered at our place.
They would make a circle
and dance all night long.
I was raised in a family of artists.
My mother plays the cello.
And you, Dad, were an actor.
I looked at you and thought:
me too I want to belong to your world.
But the Soviet Union collapsed,
and so did the world of my childhood.
I was 12 when we left for Beirut.
Far from my homeland,
I became a film director.
There used to be a city here
in ancient times.
A big city...
There were many people
here, many stories...
The king had a bride.
When he had to go to war,
he called his people and told her
in front of them:
"Wait for me
"as much as your love will allow...
"If you don't wait for me,
my victory will be for nothing."
So the king spoke, and he left
The bride remained and waited.
A year passed without
any news from the king...
The rumor was that
the king was dead.
Only the bride waited for the king.
Every evening, people would
see her enter this temple
and make fire.
VIGEN STEPANYAN
1952-2021
I am in front of Hayfilm, Dad,
or rather, whatever is left of Hayfilm.
You worked here,
and so did my
maternal grandparents.
My grandfather was a dubbing director.
My grandmother was his assistant.
During the Soviet Union,
almost all Armenian films
were produced
in this very studio,
under conditions of
strict censorship
for around 70 years.
"Red Armenia."
The Red Army
entered Yerevan in 1920.
Armenia was in ruins.
Our Armenian nation lived through
a very big tragedy
in 1915, because of the Genocide
committed by the Turks.
Films about the Genocide
were banned by the Soviet bureau.
The Soviet Union didn't want
a confrontation with Turkey.
But the Genocide has always
haunted Armenian cinema.
In "The Honor,"
the first Armenian silent film,
the reason for the
disaster is the earthquake.
In the film "Why Does
the River Make Noise?"
Atanes is taken captive
in Turkey during the war.
The river Araks separates
him from his homeland.
Under the gaze of Soviet border guards,
he dreams of returning
to his homeland.
This scene, with Mount Ararat
in the background,
is truly mighty
the symbol of lost Armenia.
There is nothing about
the Genocide in this film,
yet all Armenians cry softly,
while watching this scene.
The Soviet Union needed 60 years
to agree to make a film
about the Genocide.
"Nahapet."
You really loved this film, Dad.
Having survived the Genocide,
Nahapet and Noubar
are trying to return to life
by forming a new family.
The fate of the Armenian people
is linked to catastrophes:
the Genocide, earthquakes, wars...
It is the history of our people,
who always rises from ruins.
Go, Nahapet.
The oxen have stopped.
Stalin's fist squeezed the studio
tightly for more than 20 years.
His demand was to make cinema
an instrument of
Soviet propaganda.
"Zangezur" by
Hamo Bek-Nazaryan, 1938.
- Your mother!
- I saw her.
My wife!
My father!
A film about the birth
of Soviet Armenia.
The national army
attacks communist partisans.
The nationalists take hostage
the families of those
who support the Red Army.
My mother!
- Until when should we protect the gorge?
- Until the Red Army joins us.
- We need to retreat.
- Get up! Let's go!
Stop!
Have you lost your mind?
Leaving the position means
letting the Red Army be destroyed.
Do you understand?
Keep your positions!
Don't you dare to shoot!
Shoot, Makich. Shoot, my son!
Your waters sing to you...
It was the time of Stalin's great purges...
The first scriptwriter of "Zangezur,"
writer Axel Bakunts,
was executed before
the shooting of the film.
Stand up, brave Armenians,
so that our ancient land thrives,
Exterminate the packs of wolves,
so that our ancient land thrives.
Look, Dad!
It's the unveiling of Stalin's
statue in Yerevan in 1950.
Look who I found!
Your mother, Tamara!
My grandmother!
She participated in World War II.
She's the only woman here...
She's standing in the front row, proud.
Soon you will be born,
and Stalin will die.
In my childhood, I used to
sleep next to my grandmother.
I was raised next to this strong woman.
In the evening, she would
often tell me about the war.
She was 18 when,
together with her sister,
she signed up for the Party to go to war.
Fascinated, I listened to her
in the darkness.
After her death in 2010,
I took my camera and went
to find her war comrades.
My first film was
born: "Embers."
Our generation lived in difficult times
during the war,
but we always kept hope alive.
We believed, we believed in justice,
truth, Communism.
We studied Marxism-Leninism.
We believed in all of it!
And then, after Stalin died,
it was very difficult for us.
We were suffering:
how could the person who
led the entire country
pass away.
We believed in Communism,
and then everything collapsed.
Come here a moment!
- What do you want?
- Come here.
Take a picture.
Tamara, come sit between us.
But I don't know how
to take a photo with this!
Come. I'll show you.
So you look here.
It's like seeing Tamara during
her first years in university.
Come here.
Do I look like her?
You look like both Tamara and Vigen.
The look in your eyes...
Look at me.
Dad, isn't it dark like this?
Dance, my little Tania!
In the 1960s,
a new wave came...
"Hello, It's Me" by Dovlatyan
the first Armenian film selected
to participate in the Cannes Film Festival.
You see,
this is the feeling of liberty,
a feeling we have always missed!
I understand it all. You miss Lucia.
My dears, you shouldn't carry the past
on your shoulders.
It's a heavy burden.
And now what?
This wave of freedom
reached the Armenian mountains.
"We Are Our Mountains"
by Henrik Malyan.
Hello, boys!
Hello, Comrade Lieutenant! Welcome!
Comrade Lieutenant,
won't you take a photo of us?
Why not? I will.
A Soviet policeman
comes to the mountains
to interrogate a group of villagers,
who butchered and ate
the sheep of their neighbour Revaz.
I'm going up to the mountains. It seems
some villagers have butchered sheep.
They are very capable
of it, Comrade Lieutenant!
They are useless people, thieves!
Take care, Comrade Lieutenant.
They can butcher people too!
A cat for sure they did!
It's up to me to judge.
A wonderful scene, where the policeman
and the villager swap roles.
The villager becomes the judge,
and the policeman becomes the accused.
I am the judge.
The accused is the lieutenant.
I put myself in the shoes of Avag.
If we don't punish you now,
tomorrow you will commit
a bigger crime,
and maybe you won't get caught,
which is why you should be arrested now.
Yes.
Please arrest me,
because in prison we
can shower every 10 days.
You will give me food 3 times a
day, give me magazines.
It's not up to you
to tell us your verdict.
Answer: Do you plead guilty?
Yes. Arrest me.
The court has decided to
sentence you to execution.
Why?
In Malyan's "A Piece of Sky,"
three prostitutes come
to the city of Gyumri.
The main character is a
naive young man,
who lives with his aunt.
He falls in love with one of these
girls and decides to marry her,
rejecting the opinion of Society.
I'll take you home now.
Take your belongings and we'll go.
Home?
Why?
I want to take you away from here.
My poor one...
I don't want you to stay here.
Torik, why did you make the girl cry?
None of your business!
Don't cry, my angel.
I'll take you home.
I'll treat you like a queen.
"A Piece of Sky" would be
Malyan's last film.
His subsequent scripts
were rejected by the censors
and left unfinished.
Our film is about love.
It celebrates love.
It is about the fake
and real concept of love.
It's about the right to choose,
the right to happiness.
And without trying to sound pathetic,
our film is about freedom.
Ever since my childhood, I've been
impressed by the last scene,
when the main character proudly rides
the cart across the entire city
with his beloved wife and aunt in it.
I wanted to be as free
and daring as him.
Sergey Paradjanov was
one of the most famous
Armenian film directors in the world.
An Armenian from Georgia, Paradjanov
together with documentary
filmmaker Pelechian,
was the ambassador of
Armenian cinema to the world.
Paradjanov made only
one feature film in Armenia,
"The Color of Pomegranates."
For Paradjanov, it was a
return to his Armenian roots.
Paradjanov reveals
Armenian cultural treasures,
which were very far from being Soviet.
The film was harshly criticized,
and then the film was released
with editing done by someone else.
Under Brezhnev, the rebellious Paradjanov
was imprisoned for 4 years.
I worked and suffered under 3 despots.
The despots were in the Kremlin.
And today, perestroika is seeking
the cardiogram of the times
Perhaps a book will appear dealing
with all those years,
like a cardiogram.
The Soviet films of this era,
and not only mine,
are like a cardiogram of terror.
They are cardiograms of fear:
the fear of losing your film;
the fear of starving.
Do you remember, Dad?
Mom and you, you took my hand,
and we went to the Opera House.
It was summer.
It was very hot.
There were thousands of people,
and everyone had cloves
in their hands.
I was impressed by the sight
of so many adults crying.
It was July 20, 1990.
The funeral of Sergey Paradjanov.
It's a pity he didn't live to see
the collapse of the USSR.
Will you sign it or not?
"Nostalgia,"
one of the last Soviet Armenian films,
is about Stalin's oppression,
about the tyranny, the
torture, the deportations...
Listen to me, old man.
I've found a way out for you.
You kept speaking of your family,
your sons, your grandchildren.
You will die, and no one
will know where your corpse is!
Come on! Sign it, and that's it!
Will you sign it or not?
Well?
Now that's good.
Put the pen in his hand.
Arakel...
Oh, finally! What a nightmare!
We are done with you.
Arakel, did you find the way?
Can you accompany me?
In the world of cinema,
almost all women were in the shadows.
They glided gently through these corridors.
Women worked at dubbing, editing,
or in developing labs,
just like my grandmother Rima.
There were no female film directors.
There were no women behind cameras.
Actresses playing lead roles were few.
It was men, who were the film stars.
The first Armenian film director,
Hamo Bek-Nazaryan,
often portrayed women as victims of the
cruel traditional patriarchal society.
She has beautiful legs.
No, I think she is bow-legged.
She doesn't limp.
She has good teeth.
She isn't sick.
In the film "Pepo," the sister of
the main character Kekel,
has to marry a man she doesn't love.
It's her own hair.
The merchandise is good.
Bek-Nazaryan's cinema
was profoundly feminist.
He had a unique way of filming the
lack of respect toward the woman
and their desperate suffering.
In the film "The Honor,"
the woman hit by her father
will go on to be killed
by her jealous husband.
I am innocent...
In the film "Zareh,"
the head of the village
abducts a woman.
How should a woman who was
a victim of violence be filmed?
How should a woman
humiliated by society be filmed?
As a film director, I would have really liked to
ask Hamo Bek-Nazaryan this question.
Bagrat Hovhannisyan's film "Autumn Sun"
is truly unique and appealing,
because the woman dares to rebel
against the patriarchal society.
Since you are standing here,
all ready,
and you have nowhere to rush to,
can I ask you a question?
A pragmatic question:
You're tired. Why?
Are you starting again?
Didn't I tell you to take the horse?
Did I or didn't I?
How would I know there would be
no taxis on the way back?
- You had to use your brain.
- I have no brain.
That's why you are where you are.
- Are you starting to fight again?
- You're a child.
Do your childish things.
Or did you think of finding a car?
You wanted to sit next to the driver?
Good job!
Go on! Shout. Throw a shoe,
so that I can say you are a man...
and not a stork!
I've been surrounded by
strong and independent women.
My grandmother Tamara
was a lecturer at the
Polytechnic University.
My grandmother Mimi
was at the studio all day long.
My mother would go on giving
concerts all over the world,
but when she came back home,
I would lie down next to her
and listen to her play
cello suites by Bach.
And you, Dad,
were rarely home.
You were always at the theater
or on film sets.
I can vividly recall the
shooting of this film,
in which you played an Italian mafioso.
You spoke Italian to us
at home all day long,
and we laughed.
You were a rising star, Dad.
It was 1989.
You were finding your own place
in this film industry,
which revolved around
several male film stars.
My dear friends,
let us drink to our forge!
To our small fire! May it always be lit!
Let the sweat always be
on our foreheads!
May we fight against the fire,
against the iron,
to keep our honour high!
May our arms always be full of force!
With open foreheads,
may we all sit together,
and not lower our gaze,
when we look at each other!
Manhood! Honor!
And a modest table like this!
You knew them well.
They were your elder brothers.
This is Sos Sargsyan.
I remember, Dad, when
he would come to our place,
he would drink to your friendship
and to Armenia.
And then he would slowly say
with a hoarse voice:
"My dear little Vigen, bring the backgammon,
so that I can win a game against you."
Please pay attention.
I will now take a photo.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10...
You adored Khoren Abrahamyan.
How proud you were to have started
your theater career by his side!
"The Song of First Love"
is what made him famous.
It is a film which shows
how the career of an artist
can cause a a man to
distance himself from his values
and from his family.
- Quiet! He's sleeping.
- Let him wake up.
Do you want to eat?
Oh, how much I don't
want to come back here!
No one understands
me in this house.
Everyone is unfortunate in their own way!
How horrible!
How fed up I am!
Go to bed.
Who are you telling to
go to bed? I'm not a child!
Stop it.
Stop it?
Any woman would have been
happy to talk to me!
I am an artist!
You should understand that!
What matters most to me is my mood!
I am talking to you about art and you...
What's all this noise about?
It's nothing, Father.
Were a couple, were just talking.
Go to bed, Father.
Go to bed? How dare
you tell me to go to bed?
Go to bed yourself! And don't you speak!
Not a sound!
What is it?
- It's good.
- Who? Me?
Yes, the colors, looks nice, the camera.
Bro, I'll tell you something.
Film director Tamara Stepanyan
is a big problem
for Armenian cinema.
Do you remember?
When I told you that I wanted
to become a film director,
you were very afraid
that I wouldn't succeed.
You told me that
it is a profession for men.
My desire to become a film director...
when did it start exactly?
I was 7 years old when I acted
in a film by Edgar Baghdassaryan,
where all the characters were children.
I was fascinated by the director's work.
He had turned the film set
into a big playground,
where we, the children,
were playing a war game.
Limitless capabilities and freedom.
More so, the late 1980s
were a dramatic period.
Madam, to which cemetery?
The old one, my son.
There was war in Nagorno-Karabakh,
and the Gyumri earthquake
destroyed the lives of 25,000
people in a matter of minutes.
In 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed.
The 1990s...
the first years of independence...
Everyone thought that independence
would bring prosperity
but the opposite happened.
No gas,
no electricity,
no water.
Bread was rationed.
These were "the cold and dark years."
Many artists had to leave the country,
including us, Dad.
Upon leaving my grandfather
and my grandmothers,
I asked them to promise me
to write a letter to me every week.
I remember the Saturday
evenings in Beirut, Dad...
Armenian artists like you would
gather together at our place.
You would write nostalgic songs
and sing them,
and my Mom would play the cello.
And me, I would listen.
The days passed slowly,
and so did life.
Outside, the rain came
down with gray joy.
The shadow of the candle
flickered on the wall in silence.
At night, your open wings
were gently growing.
Blue bird,
tender bird.
I stayed.
Blue bird, magical bird.
Mom and you came back to live in Armenia.
As for me, I stayed in Beirut,
where I studied cinema.
For my graduation film,
I wrote a role for you.
I came to Yerevan
and filmed you in your office.
How are you, Dad?
Good morning.
What are you doing?
Wait. Wait a minute.
The story of our family closely resembles
that of the Armenian people.
A story of separation, immigration,
and reunion.
"Wine", the first film
by Bagrat Hovhannisyan.
Andrei Tarkovsky was the artistic director.
During World War II,
a young boy wandered around
the train station every day,
waiting for his soldier father to return.
Vahik!
Quick, quick! Come!
They are waiting for you. Your father!
Dear Sahak, come.
Let's go home.
Return.
Search.
Memories.
Loss.
Oblivion.
Waiting.
Meeting.
Is it possible?
Is it possible to forget?
Is it possible to return to the past?
Is it possible?
Those who return are ghosts.
I am Hamo Jalalyan from Dilijan!
I am Hamo Jalalyan from Dilijan!!!
I am Hamo Jalalyan from Dilijan!!!
Am I becoming a ghost like you?
What are you singing?
No cross or statue...
A simple plot of land.
In a deserted field, all alone in silence,
He is lying down without
anyone paying attention.
In his wounded chest
with innumerable injuries,
An invincible tempest
of noble ideas.
No more whispers.
His tired head
on the chest of his motherland,
He doesn't hear the painful
world cry.
His soul is sleeping...
The bright and ardent stars
light up his tomb.
The smell of herbs,
the odor of incense.
I realized it quite late
that I had a father in cinema.
Dad, I know you will understand me.
I mean an Armenian film director,
whose successor I would like to be.
Frunze Dovlatyan.
The Prince of Nostalgia.
Often, Dovlatyan
acted in his own films.
He played the main character
in the film "The Lonely Walnut."
Dovlatyans films are like poems
about Armenian identity,
about the journey and about the roots.
The ghosts haunt us everywhere.
Sona!
In any case, someone comes here regularly.
Dovlatyans obsessions
are familiar to me.
I see myself in them.
Me, who always wants to return
Having spent years in Lebanon,
I moved to Paris.
I am filling the gap of
being far from Armenia
by making films there.
This scene reminds me
of our farewells, Dad.
It was the same scene, in the airport.
Come. Let's go.
- This is food for the road.
- Goodbye.
Moreover, Dad, he looks like you.
Your friend, director David Safaryan,
sent me the making of his film
"28-94 Local Temperature."
It's one of your last films.
It is extremely painful for me
to watch these images.
You were supposed
to act in my feature film.
You were waiting for it impatiently.
And you were proud of me.
Hello.
Have you come?
- Are you tired?
- Yes, I am tired.
- Then sleep, sleep.
- I will sleep.
My journey is coming to an end.
Sos Artashesovich, Dad,
I will leave for now.
Thank you for having
welcomed me into your circle.
But I will be back,
to my home.
during the Soviet Union,
I adored Thursday evenings.
Everyone gathered together
around the TV
for an evening of Armenian films.
The screen was grey before 8pm.
At 8pm, the film would start!
It's strange.
Visions I did not expect.
A moment in the shadow,
under the light.
Follow me
on a journey into the past,
in the footsteps of Armenian cinema.
My Armenian Phantoms
A film by Tamara Stepanyan
I can remember
dreaming of being a pioneer,
tying the small red neckerchief...
But my dream didn't come true.
My brother had the neckerchief,
My cousin had it too.
I was very jealous of them.
I remember that.
People always gathered at our place.
They would make a circle
and dance all night long.
I was raised in a family of artists.
My mother plays the cello.
And you, Dad, were an actor.
I looked at you and thought:
me too I want to belong to your world.
But the Soviet Union collapsed,
and so did the world of my childhood.
I was 12 when we left for Beirut.
Far from my homeland,
I became a film director.
There used to be a city here
in ancient times.
A big city...
There were many people
here, many stories...
The king had a bride.
When he had to go to war,
he called his people and told her
in front of them:
"Wait for me
"as much as your love will allow...
"If you don't wait for me,
my victory will be for nothing."
So the king spoke, and he left
The bride remained and waited.
A year passed without
any news from the king...
The rumor was that
the king was dead.
Only the bride waited for the king.
Every evening, people would
see her enter this temple
and make fire.
VIGEN STEPANYAN
1952-2021
I am in front of Hayfilm, Dad,
or rather, whatever is left of Hayfilm.
You worked here,
and so did my
maternal grandparents.
My grandfather was a dubbing director.
My grandmother was his assistant.
During the Soviet Union,
almost all Armenian films
were produced
in this very studio,
under conditions of
strict censorship
for around 70 years.
"Red Armenia."
The Red Army
entered Yerevan in 1920.
Armenia was in ruins.
Our Armenian nation lived through
a very big tragedy
in 1915, because of the Genocide
committed by the Turks.
Films about the Genocide
were banned by the Soviet bureau.
The Soviet Union didn't want
a confrontation with Turkey.
But the Genocide has always
haunted Armenian cinema.
In "The Honor,"
the first Armenian silent film,
the reason for the
disaster is the earthquake.
In the film "Why Does
the River Make Noise?"
Atanes is taken captive
in Turkey during the war.
The river Araks separates
him from his homeland.
Under the gaze of Soviet border guards,
he dreams of returning
to his homeland.
This scene, with Mount Ararat
in the background,
is truly mighty
the symbol of lost Armenia.
There is nothing about
the Genocide in this film,
yet all Armenians cry softly,
while watching this scene.
The Soviet Union needed 60 years
to agree to make a film
about the Genocide.
"Nahapet."
You really loved this film, Dad.
Having survived the Genocide,
Nahapet and Noubar
are trying to return to life
by forming a new family.
The fate of the Armenian people
is linked to catastrophes:
the Genocide, earthquakes, wars...
It is the history of our people,
who always rises from ruins.
Go, Nahapet.
The oxen have stopped.
Stalin's fist squeezed the studio
tightly for more than 20 years.
His demand was to make cinema
an instrument of
Soviet propaganda.
"Zangezur" by
Hamo Bek-Nazaryan, 1938.
- Your mother!
- I saw her.
My wife!
My father!
A film about the birth
of Soviet Armenia.
The national army
attacks communist partisans.
The nationalists take hostage
the families of those
who support the Red Army.
My mother!
- Until when should we protect the gorge?
- Until the Red Army joins us.
- We need to retreat.
- Get up! Let's go!
Stop!
Have you lost your mind?
Leaving the position means
letting the Red Army be destroyed.
Do you understand?
Keep your positions!
Don't you dare to shoot!
Shoot, Makich. Shoot, my son!
Your waters sing to you...
It was the time of Stalin's great purges...
The first scriptwriter of "Zangezur,"
writer Axel Bakunts,
was executed before
the shooting of the film.
Stand up, brave Armenians,
so that our ancient land thrives,
Exterminate the packs of wolves,
so that our ancient land thrives.
Look, Dad!
It's the unveiling of Stalin's
statue in Yerevan in 1950.
Look who I found!
Your mother, Tamara!
My grandmother!
She participated in World War II.
She's the only woman here...
She's standing in the front row, proud.
Soon you will be born,
and Stalin will die.
In my childhood, I used to
sleep next to my grandmother.
I was raised next to this strong woman.
In the evening, she would
often tell me about the war.
She was 18 when,
together with her sister,
she signed up for the Party to go to war.
Fascinated, I listened to her
in the darkness.
After her death in 2010,
I took my camera and went
to find her war comrades.
My first film was
born: "Embers."
Our generation lived in difficult times
during the war,
but we always kept hope alive.
We believed, we believed in justice,
truth, Communism.
We studied Marxism-Leninism.
We believed in all of it!
And then, after Stalin died,
it was very difficult for us.
We were suffering:
how could the person who
led the entire country
pass away.
We believed in Communism,
and then everything collapsed.
Come here a moment!
- What do you want?
- Come here.
Take a picture.
Tamara, come sit between us.
But I don't know how
to take a photo with this!
Come. I'll show you.
So you look here.
It's like seeing Tamara during
her first years in university.
Come here.
Do I look like her?
You look like both Tamara and Vigen.
The look in your eyes...
Look at me.
Dad, isn't it dark like this?
Dance, my little Tania!
In the 1960s,
a new wave came...
"Hello, It's Me" by Dovlatyan
the first Armenian film selected
to participate in the Cannes Film Festival.
You see,
this is the feeling of liberty,
a feeling we have always missed!
I understand it all. You miss Lucia.
My dears, you shouldn't carry the past
on your shoulders.
It's a heavy burden.
And now what?
This wave of freedom
reached the Armenian mountains.
"We Are Our Mountains"
by Henrik Malyan.
Hello, boys!
Hello, Comrade Lieutenant! Welcome!
Comrade Lieutenant,
won't you take a photo of us?
Why not? I will.
A Soviet policeman
comes to the mountains
to interrogate a group of villagers,
who butchered and ate
the sheep of their neighbour Revaz.
I'm going up to the mountains. It seems
some villagers have butchered sheep.
They are very capable
of it, Comrade Lieutenant!
They are useless people, thieves!
Take care, Comrade Lieutenant.
They can butcher people too!
A cat for sure they did!
It's up to me to judge.
A wonderful scene, where the policeman
and the villager swap roles.
The villager becomes the judge,
and the policeman becomes the accused.
I am the judge.
The accused is the lieutenant.
I put myself in the shoes of Avag.
If we don't punish you now,
tomorrow you will commit
a bigger crime,
and maybe you won't get caught,
which is why you should be arrested now.
Yes.
Please arrest me,
because in prison we
can shower every 10 days.
You will give me food 3 times a
day, give me magazines.
It's not up to you
to tell us your verdict.
Answer: Do you plead guilty?
Yes. Arrest me.
The court has decided to
sentence you to execution.
Why?
In Malyan's "A Piece of Sky,"
three prostitutes come
to the city of Gyumri.
The main character is a
naive young man,
who lives with his aunt.
He falls in love with one of these
girls and decides to marry her,
rejecting the opinion of Society.
I'll take you home now.
Take your belongings and we'll go.
Home?
Why?
I want to take you away from here.
My poor one...
I don't want you to stay here.
Torik, why did you make the girl cry?
None of your business!
Don't cry, my angel.
I'll take you home.
I'll treat you like a queen.
"A Piece of Sky" would be
Malyan's last film.
His subsequent scripts
were rejected by the censors
and left unfinished.
Our film is about love.
It celebrates love.
It is about the fake
and real concept of love.
It's about the right to choose,
the right to happiness.
And without trying to sound pathetic,
our film is about freedom.
Ever since my childhood, I've been
impressed by the last scene,
when the main character proudly rides
the cart across the entire city
with his beloved wife and aunt in it.
I wanted to be as free
and daring as him.
Sergey Paradjanov was
one of the most famous
Armenian film directors in the world.
An Armenian from Georgia, Paradjanov
together with documentary
filmmaker Pelechian,
was the ambassador of
Armenian cinema to the world.
Paradjanov made only
one feature film in Armenia,
"The Color of Pomegranates."
For Paradjanov, it was a
return to his Armenian roots.
Paradjanov reveals
Armenian cultural treasures,
which were very far from being Soviet.
The film was harshly criticized,
and then the film was released
with editing done by someone else.
Under Brezhnev, the rebellious Paradjanov
was imprisoned for 4 years.
I worked and suffered under 3 despots.
The despots were in the Kremlin.
And today, perestroika is seeking
the cardiogram of the times
Perhaps a book will appear dealing
with all those years,
like a cardiogram.
The Soviet films of this era,
and not only mine,
are like a cardiogram of terror.
They are cardiograms of fear:
the fear of losing your film;
the fear of starving.
Do you remember, Dad?
Mom and you, you took my hand,
and we went to the Opera House.
It was summer.
It was very hot.
There were thousands of people,
and everyone had cloves
in their hands.
I was impressed by the sight
of so many adults crying.
It was July 20, 1990.
The funeral of Sergey Paradjanov.
It's a pity he didn't live to see
the collapse of the USSR.
Will you sign it or not?
"Nostalgia,"
one of the last Soviet Armenian films,
is about Stalin's oppression,
about the tyranny, the
torture, the deportations...
Listen to me, old man.
I've found a way out for you.
You kept speaking of your family,
your sons, your grandchildren.
You will die, and no one
will know where your corpse is!
Come on! Sign it, and that's it!
Will you sign it or not?
Well?
Now that's good.
Put the pen in his hand.
Arakel...
Oh, finally! What a nightmare!
We are done with you.
Arakel, did you find the way?
Can you accompany me?
In the world of cinema,
almost all women were in the shadows.
They glided gently through these corridors.
Women worked at dubbing, editing,
or in developing labs,
just like my grandmother Rima.
There were no female film directors.
There were no women behind cameras.
Actresses playing lead roles were few.
It was men, who were the film stars.
The first Armenian film director,
Hamo Bek-Nazaryan,
often portrayed women as victims of the
cruel traditional patriarchal society.
She has beautiful legs.
No, I think she is bow-legged.
She doesn't limp.
She has good teeth.
She isn't sick.
In the film "Pepo," the sister of
the main character Kekel,
has to marry a man she doesn't love.
It's her own hair.
The merchandise is good.
Bek-Nazaryan's cinema
was profoundly feminist.
He had a unique way of filming the
lack of respect toward the woman
and their desperate suffering.
In the film "The Honor,"
the woman hit by her father
will go on to be killed
by her jealous husband.
I am innocent...
In the film "Zareh,"
the head of the village
abducts a woman.
How should a woman who was
a victim of violence be filmed?
How should a woman
humiliated by society be filmed?
As a film director, I would have really liked to
ask Hamo Bek-Nazaryan this question.
Bagrat Hovhannisyan's film "Autumn Sun"
is truly unique and appealing,
because the woman dares to rebel
against the patriarchal society.
Since you are standing here,
all ready,
and you have nowhere to rush to,
can I ask you a question?
A pragmatic question:
You're tired. Why?
Are you starting again?
Didn't I tell you to take the horse?
Did I or didn't I?
How would I know there would be
no taxis on the way back?
- You had to use your brain.
- I have no brain.
That's why you are where you are.
- Are you starting to fight again?
- You're a child.
Do your childish things.
Or did you think of finding a car?
You wanted to sit next to the driver?
Good job!
Go on! Shout. Throw a shoe,
so that I can say you are a man...
and not a stork!
I've been surrounded by
strong and independent women.
My grandmother Tamara
was a lecturer at the
Polytechnic University.
My grandmother Mimi
was at the studio all day long.
My mother would go on giving
concerts all over the world,
but when she came back home,
I would lie down next to her
and listen to her play
cello suites by Bach.
And you, Dad,
were rarely home.
You were always at the theater
or on film sets.
I can vividly recall the
shooting of this film,
in which you played an Italian mafioso.
You spoke Italian to us
at home all day long,
and we laughed.
You were a rising star, Dad.
It was 1989.
You were finding your own place
in this film industry,
which revolved around
several male film stars.
My dear friends,
let us drink to our forge!
To our small fire! May it always be lit!
Let the sweat always be
on our foreheads!
May we fight against the fire,
against the iron,
to keep our honour high!
May our arms always be full of force!
With open foreheads,
may we all sit together,
and not lower our gaze,
when we look at each other!
Manhood! Honor!
And a modest table like this!
You knew them well.
They were your elder brothers.
This is Sos Sargsyan.
I remember, Dad, when
he would come to our place,
he would drink to your friendship
and to Armenia.
And then he would slowly say
with a hoarse voice:
"My dear little Vigen, bring the backgammon,
so that I can win a game against you."
Please pay attention.
I will now take a photo.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10...
You adored Khoren Abrahamyan.
How proud you were to have started
your theater career by his side!
"The Song of First Love"
is what made him famous.
It is a film which shows
how the career of an artist
can cause a a man to
distance himself from his values
and from his family.
- Quiet! He's sleeping.
- Let him wake up.
Do you want to eat?
Oh, how much I don't
want to come back here!
No one understands
me in this house.
Everyone is unfortunate in their own way!
How horrible!
How fed up I am!
Go to bed.
Who are you telling to
go to bed? I'm not a child!
Stop it.
Stop it?
Any woman would have been
happy to talk to me!
I am an artist!
You should understand that!
What matters most to me is my mood!
I am talking to you about art and you...
What's all this noise about?
It's nothing, Father.
Were a couple, were just talking.
Go to bed, Father.
Go to bed? How dare
you tell me to go to bed?
Go to bed yourself! And don't you speak!
Not a sound!
What is it?
- It's good.
- Who? Me?
Yes, the colors, looks nice, the camera.
Bro, I'll tell you something.
Film director Tamara Stepanyan
is a big problem
for Armenian cinema.
Do you remember?
When I told you that I wanted
to become a film director,
you were very afraid
that I wouldn't succeed.
You told me that
it is a profession for men.
My desire to become a film director...
when did it start exactly?
I was 7 years old when I acted
in a film by Edgar Baghdassaryan,
where all the characters were children.
I was fascinated by the director's work.
He had turned the film set
into a big playground,
where we, the children,
were playing a war game.
Limitless capabilities and freedom.
More so, the late 1980s
were a dramatic period.
Madam, to which cemetery?
The old one, my son.
There was war in Nagorno-Karabakh,
and the Gyumri earthquake
destroyed the lives of 25,000
people in a matter of minutes.
In 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed.
The 1990s...
the first years of independence...
Everyone thought that independence
would bring prosperity
but the opposite happened.
No gas,
no electricity,
no water.
Bread was rationed.
These were "the cold and dark years."
Many artists had to leave the country,
including us, Dad.
Upon leaving my grandfather
and my grandmothers,
I asked them to promise me
to write a letter to me every week.
I remember the Saturday
evenings in Beirut, Dad...
Armenian artists like you would
gather together at our place.
You would write nostalgic songs
and sing them,
and my Mom would play the cello.
And me, I would listen.
The days passed slowly,
and so did life.
Outside, the rain came
down with gray joy.
The shadow of the candle
flickered on the wall in silence.
At night, your open wings
were gently growing.
Blue bird,
tender bird.
I stayed.
Blue bird, magical bird.
Mom and you came back to live in Armenia.
As for me, I stayed in Beirut,
where I studied cinema.
For my graduation film,
I wrote a role for you.
I came to Yerevan
and filmed you in your office.
How are you, Dad?
Good morning.
What are you doing?
Wait. Wait a minute.
The story of our family closely resembles
that of the Armenian people.
A story of separation, immigration,
and reunion.
"Wine", the first film
by Bagrat Hovhannisyan.
Andrei Tarkovsky was the artistic director.
During World War II,
a young boy wandered around
the train station every day,
waiting for his soldier father to return.
Vahik!
Quick, quick! Come!
They are waiting for you. Your father!
Dear Sahak, come.
Let's go home.
Return.
Search.
Memories.
Loss.
Oblivion.
Waiting.
Meeting.
Is it possible?
Is it possible to forget?
Is it possible to return to the past?
Is it possible?
Those who return are ghosts.
I am Hamo Jalalyan from Dilijan!
I am Hamo Jalalyan from Dilijan!!!
I am Hamo Jalalyan from Dilijan!!!
Am I becoming a ghost like you?
What are you singing?
No cross or statue...
A simple plot of land.
In a deserted field, all alone in silence,
He is lying down without
anyone paying attention.
In his wounded chest
with innumerable injuries,
An invincible tempest
of noble ideas.
No more whispers.
His tired head
on the chest of his motherland,
He doesn't hear the painful
world cry.
His soul is sleeping...
The bright and ardent stars
light up his tomb.
The smell of herbs,
the odor of incense.
I realized it quite late
that I had a father in cinema.
Dad, I know you will understand me.
I mean an Armenian film director,
whose successor I would like to be.
Frunze Dovlatyan.
The Prince of Nostalgia.
Often, Dovlatyan
acted in his own films.
He played the main character
in the film "The Lonely Walnut."
Dovlatyans films are like poems
about Armenian identity,
about the journey and about the roots.
The ghosts haunt us everywhere.
Sona!
In any case, someone comes here regularly.
Dovlatyans obsessions
are familiar to me.
I see myself in them.
Me, who always wants to return
Having spent years in Lebanon,
I moved to Paris.
I am filling the gap of
being far from Armenia
by making films there.
This scene reminds me
of our farewells, Dad.
It was the same scene, in the airport.
Come. Let's go.
- This is food for the road.
- Goodbye.
Moreover, Dad, he looks like you.
Your friend, director David Safaryan,
sent me the making of his film
"28-94 Local Temperature."
It's one of your last films.
It is extremely painful for me
to watch these images.
You were supposed
to act in my feature film.
You were waiting for it impatiently.
And you were proud of me.
Hello.
Have you come?
- Are you tired?
- Yes, I am tired.
- Then sleep, sleep.
- I will sleep.
My journey is coming to an end.
Sos Artashesovich, Dad,
I will leave for now.
Thank you for having
welcomed me into your circle.
But I will be back,
to my home.