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The Lark Farm (2007)

The Lark Farm (2007)
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As adapted from the roman by Antonia Arslan and co-directed by legendary Italian brothers Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, The Lark Farm marks one of the few international features to tackle the Armenian genocide head-on. The story (with its thematic parallels, in the early scenes, to De Sica's 1970 Garden of the Finzi-Continis) concerns the Avakian clan. An Armenian family living an affluent lifestyle and periodically shuttling back and forth between their two comfortable homes, the Avakians feel convinced that the rising tide of Turkish hostility on the horizon means little to them and will scarcely affect their day to day. Indeed, The Avakians ignore the warning signs, and set about preparing for a family reunion with the impending visit of two well-to-do sons - landowner Aram, who resides in Turkey, and Assadour, a physician living in Venice. Lo and behold, these illusions come crashing down when a Turkish military regiment crops up at the house, annihilates every male member of the family and forces the ladies to trek off into the Syrian desert, where they will be left to rot. Meanwhile, a handsome Turkish officer (Alessandro Preziosi) falls for Aram's daughter and makes an aggressive attempt to deliver her and her family from certain death, even as the circumstances surrounding him attest to the astounding difficulty of this goal. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Paz VegaArsinée Khanjian, (more)
Director(s):
Vittorio TavianiPaolo Taviani, (more)
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Lark Farm

As adapted from the roman by Antonia Arslan and co-directed by legendary Italian brothers Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, The Lark Farm marks one of the few international features to tackle the Armenian genocide head-on. The story (with its thematic parallels, in the early scenes, to De Sica's 1970 Garden of the Finzi-Continis) concerns the Avakian clan. An Armenian family living an affluent lifestyle and periodically shuttling back and forth between their two comfortable homes, the Avakians feel convinced that the rising tide of Turkish hostility on the horizon means little to them and will scarcely affect their day to day. Indeed, The Avakians ignore the warning signs, and set about preparing for a family reunion with the impending visit of two well-to-do sons - landowner Aram, who resides in Turkey, and Assadour, a physician living in Venice. Lo and behold, these illusions come crashing down when a Turkish military regiment crops up at the house, annihilates every male member of the family and forces the ladies to trek off into the Syrian desert, where they will be left to rot. Meanwhile, a handsome Turkish officer (Alessandro Preziosi) falls for Aram's daughter and makes an aggressive attempt to deliver her and her family from certain death, even as the circumstances surrounding him attest to the astounding difficulty of this goal. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
120 mins

Complete Cast of The Lark Farm


Director(s):
Paolo TavianiVittorio Taviani
Writer(s):
Paolo TavianiVittorio Taviani
Producer(s):
Grazia Volpi
Categories:
ForeignDrama
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    Member Reviews
     
    Morgan M.

    This film was heartbreaking to watch, all those Armenian men that were murdered by the Turks that they were friends with and worked beside, all those women and children that were forced to march in the Syrian Desert, raped, burned at the stake then decapitated, crucified, all those children who was forced to die not knowing what kind of a life they would have lived. The point is that this is a good film, that is if you want to know the truth, despite the fact that this is historical fiction, its not very far from what actually happened. It clearly shows that the Turkish Government really went against the Armenians and tried to kill every last one of them! For those of you who say that Genocide doesn't count if its in your own territory, its a lie! Genocide doesn't have to be in ones own territory to be called a Genocide! One day the Armenians will have a voice, and if you watch this movie, you will see what they gone through.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Jeff H.

    A good movie that just missed being great. This was a moving story with great acting, great production values. Unfortunately, the story suffered from bad editing that sometimes made it unclear where and when the curent scene was. Most of this was in the first third of the film, but from there the story finds its pace, and does a great job showing yet another in a long line of state sanctioned genocide. This was the genocide of Turkish Armenians, which may not be widely known. Despite a few flaws, this is worth a watch. Takes a few wrong truns, but gets on track to become a trip you won't regret.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Daniel B.

    Excellent...............

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