Film-makers on film: Atom Egoyan

Film-makers on film: Atom Egoyan

The Daily Tepegraph, UK
July 16 2005

Atom Egoyan explains to Mark Monahan why Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining
is a remarkable fusion of opera and cinema

Atom Egoyan is something of a living legend among lovers of
art-house cinema. Born in Egypt to Armenian parents, but raised in
British Columbia, he makes films as exotic as his lineage: cerebral,
mysterious, astonishingly atmospheric studies of people in emotional
extremis.

Atom Egoyan: loves opera The Adjuster (1991) and Exotica (1994) –
both poised to make a welcome appearance on DVD (from July 30) –
are tense, erotically-charged tales of lust and longing; Felicia’s
Journey (1999) a gripping thriller; Ararat (2002) a demanding but
extraordinary film about film, death and history.

Egoyan’s masterpiece remains The Sweet Hereafter (1997), a mesmerising
fairytale-noir about a lawyer (Ian Holm) who descends on a small,
snow-bound town in the wake of a terrible accident, and it’s this,
above all, that has guaranteed him immortality. But the director
has many other strings to his bow. He’s also a helplessly highbrow
maker of filmic installations and television plays, an accomplished
classical guitarist, and, as Toronto-based opera-lovers have recently
learnt to their delight, a fine director of Wagner, too.

The latter offers an insight into Egoyan’s appreciation of Stanley
Kubrick’s magnificent, terrifying The Shining. Made in 1980, it’s one
of the pinnacles of Kubrick’s career (which also famously included
Dr Strangelove, 2001: A Space Odyssey and Barry Lyndon, all of which
have previously been bagged for this page), but not, says Egoyan,
for reasons you might expect.

“I hadn’t seen it for many years,” he explains, “and a few weeks
ago I had this impulse to watch it. I can’t explain why, but it was
inspiring. I’ve been doing a lot of work in opera lately, and it
was one of the most remarkable fusions of opera and cinema I’d ever
encountered. People ask me whether or not I would ever think of doing
an opera for a film, and I think Kubrick achieved that. His use of
composers such as Penderecki and Ligeti, and in particular Bartók,
was just stunning.”

To illustrate his point, Egoyan homes in on a pivotal, punishingly
tense exchange between little Danny Torrance (Danny Lloyd) and his
father, Jack (Jack Nicholson). Clearly unstable from the start, Jack
has taken his wife, Wendy (Shelley Duvall) and Danny to Colorado’s
isolated Overlook Hotel, which he is caretaking over the winter. The
building is otherwise deserted – apart, that is, from its many ghosts,
which are by now tipping Jack into full-blown psychosis.

He summons Danny over to sit on the bed with him, says Egoyan, “and
this begins a six-minute sequence that plays out to the third movement
of Bartók’s Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta. It’s thrilling
to watch the very terse dialogue later between Jack Nicholson and the
boy on the bed, and the spaces that Kubrick has allowed for the music
within this dialogue. I don’t think there’s any editing of the music
at all – the piece is kept intact – but the play between dialogue and
the actions of Bartók’s music is operatic. There’s no other way of
putting it.”

So, does the music becomes dialogue in itself, or even an integral
part of the narrative?

“Sure,” says Egoyan. “I think that we’re all kind of accustomed
to a more Hollywood use of music, but rarely do we see music that
pushes the boundaries of tonality used within dialogue, and in this
film it’s just done brilliantly, contributing to the sense of dread
that permeates the movie. There’s a theatricality to this film, and
indeed in much of Kubrick, which really pushes our sense of cinematic
naturalism. But I think The Shining especially is so ambitious,
and there are so many subjects he’s dealing with subtextually that
he uses all these devices that are available to him, and boldly.”

The question of subtexts in the film is an interesting one. The
combined talents of Kubrick and Nicholson make it all too easy to
appreciate The Shining simply as an impeccably aimed neutron bomb of
pure horror. But, as Egoyan says, there’s much more to it than that.

“There’s this sense of violent past,” he explains, “not just with the
family who were the previous caretakers. There are also references
made to the Native Americans, in the fact that the hotel itself is
on an ancient Indian burial site, and that it’s called the Overlook
Hotel, as though a historical wrongdoing has been overlooked. And of
course there’s the black caretaker [who meets a grisly end], and the
fact that the final image is on July 4, which is Independence Day. To
speak of it sounds heavy-handed, but these themes are quite latent,
and I find that very exciting.”

Several of Egoyan’s own movies echo The Shining in having solitary,
rather strange characters at their core, people dealing – poorly
– with unresolved pasts. Egoyan not only acknowledges this, but
cheerfully admits to having “ripped off” The Shining’s opening,
floating helicopter shots that follow the Torrances’ vehicle heading
off through the mountains. He employs a similar device in The Sweet
Hereafter, tracking the doomed schoolbus along frozen, winding roads.

Sadly, there’s no space here to linger on his thoughts on Kubrick’s
ominous use of camera movement, establishment of “separate realities”,
heightened approach to characterisation, or just how Nicholson’s
performance generates such power (“It’s as if he and Kubrick are in
on a sort of private joke”). But it would feel a dereliction of duty
not to close with perhaps his most piercing observation.

“The film is largely about triggers,” he says, “at which point
something is abstracted, our own family can become abstract to us.
There’s that scene on the bed, where Danny asks his father – who he
remembers has hurt him before – “You wouldn’t hurt us, would you?”,
and that becomes the trigger that allows Jack to abstract and do
violence against his family members. And that’s what’s so chilling
about the movie, that’s where the true horror is: it’s in the fact
that we’re all quite capable of that.”

To order The Shining on DVD for £19.99, incl p&p, call Telegraph
Music Direct on 0870 164 6465. Prices are subject to availability.

–Boundary_(ID_vB92d1XC9VDTzV22+FmJqw)–

NATO cooperation with CIS security body a long way off – Russia

NATO cooperation with CIS security body a long way off – Russian expert

Interfax-AVN military news agency web site
13 Jul 05

Moscow, 13 July: NATO is unlikely to adopt a decision on cooperation
with the Collective Security Treaty Organization in the near future,
Aleksandr Nikitin, the director of the Centre for Political and
International studies in Russia, told Interfax-AVN on Wednesday.

“There continues to be a vague disregard in NATO for the CSTO as an
organization and, one year after the CSTO secretary-general made a
proposal on cooperation to the NATO leadership, the situation has not
changed,” Nikitin said.

Nonetheless, he said, the fact that NATO is not trying to demonstrate
its distance from the CSTO blatantly can be regarded as positive. “The
alliance’s agreement to send to Moscow 100 senior officers from 26
countries to attend a CSTO presentation briefing in June, is
confirmation of this,” Nikitin said.

He said that during the one-and-a-half-hour exchange, ” it was
noticeable that, on the whole, the senior NATO officers simply did not
know about the CSTO and were confused on basic issues such as the
division of functions between the CSTO and the CIS”.

“But even if Brussels has still not decided in favour of `befriending’
the CSTO, the policy of inviting the alliance to take part in joint
practical projects with the CSTO – attending exercises, coordinating
border issues on the Tajik-Afghan border, where the areas of
responsibility of both organizations meet, and other projects – is the
right policy,” the director of the centre said.

Earlier, the secretary-general of the CSTO, Nikolay Bordyuzha, told
journalists that NATO had even ignored a proposal from the CSTO on
cooperation in combating Afghan drug trafficking.

The member states of the CSTO are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan.

Mediators Seeking Resolution of NK to meet with Karabakh officials

Mediators seeking resolution of disputed enclave to meet with Karabakh
officials

.c The Associated Press

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – Foreign mediators were slated to meet with
officials in the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh Wednesday amid
renewed efforts to settle the enclave’s status and resolve the
long-running conflict.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe is trying find
a solution to the long-running dispute over the mountainous region,
which was seized by ethnic Armenian forces in a war with Azerbaijan in
the 1990s.

A cease-fire was signed in 1994, but the enclave’s final status has
not been determined and shooting breaks out frequently between the two
sides which face off across a demilitarized buffer zone.

The diplomats from Russia, the United States and France were scheduled
to arrive in the Armenian capital then fly immediately to
Nagorno-Karabakh’s main city, Stepanakert, before returning to Yerevan
for more talks.

The OSCE mediators on Tuesday met with officials in Azerbaijan, whose
president, Ilham Aliev, last month said there were signs of progress
in resolving the dispute.

However, Russian envoy Yuri Merzlyakov said Tuesday that it was
unlikely negotiations would be completed in time for an August meeting
of the rival nations’ presidents on the sidelines of an gathering of
ex-Soviet leaders.

07/13/05 03:01 EDT

ANKARA: Contacts with Armenia Continue

Zaman, Turkey
July 13 2005

Contacts with Armenia Continue
By Zaman
Published: Wednesday July 13, 2005
zaman.com

Since activities against Turkey have been intensified within the
frame of the 90th year of the so-called Armenian genocide, the
anticipated meeting between Turkish and Armenian leaders has not
taken place; however, mutual contacts are still continuing.

There has been no progress in the process initiated in April in a
letter by Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan to Armenian President
Robert Kocharian, however, diplomats from both countries are
continuing their efforts to normalize bilateral relations again. Two
diplomats from the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs have come
together with their Armenian counterparts in a European country. In
the meeting, the Turkish party has once again presented their
proposals for normalization. These proposals are reportedly being
evaluated by the Yerevan administration. Namik Tan, a Turkish Foreign
Ministry spokesperson, replied to a question regarding the talks by
pointing out that contacts with the Armenian party occur at various
levels, between the foreign ministers in particular, have long been
taking place on international and other platforms. ”Regional matters
concerning both countries are being handled in these contacts.”
Ankara wants relations to return to normal by asking Yerevan to quit
its allegations of genocide, to remove expressions in the
Constitution condemning Turkey and to withdraw from the Upper Karabag
(Karabakh), a region it has been occupying. Turkey had previously
made the decision of not writing a new letter upon Kocharian’s
attitude in his reply to Erdogan.

ANKARA: Erdogan: No Global Peace, No Dealing with Global Terror

Turkish Press
July 8 2005

Erdogan: If We Cannot Establish Global Peace, We Cannot Deal With
Global Terror

SAN FRANCISCO – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
indicated that “if we cannot establish global peace, we cannot deal
with global terror.“
Erdogan delivered a speech at a meeting organized and co-sponsored by
“World Affairs Council of Northern California” and “Commonwealth Club
of California” in Fairmont Hotel. Dozens of foreign diplomats were
among the audience that listened to Erdogan.

Erdogan stressed that joint efforts must be made to prevent threats
and terror. “This is not something I am saying at the moment. I
began to talk about terrorism as of the first day our party –Justice
& Development Party (AKP)- was established. We have been experiencing
terrorism well before September 11. Since 1978, we have lost over
40,000 dear lives to terror. I believe that there is no other example
(like Turkey`s) in the whole world,“ told Erdogan.

Erdogan remarked that, right after the September 11th attacks, he
sent a letter to the U.S. ambassador in Ankara urging the embassy to
help create a joint platform against terror. “In my letter, I wrote
that terror has no religion, nationality, ethnicity or homeland. We
do not know when, why, and where terror may strike,“ noted Erdogan.

“Just last week, Turkey lost six soldiers in a mine attack on a
train in eastern Turkey. The same terror hit London after New York,
Istanbul and Madrid. As Turks, we condemn the vicious bombing
incidents in London“, commented Erdogan.

Erdogan stressed that terror is a result or conclusion that is caused
by poverty and ignorance. “Terror has no boundaries. The United
States or Spain or Turkey cannot deal with the terrorist alone. There
must be serious cooperation in the fight against terror,“ said
Erdogan.

According to Erdogan, in 2004, the money spent on weapons globally
was approximately 900 billion USD. “If we use a portion of this 900
billion USD in eliminating poverty and ignorance, would not we be
able to end terrorism? The U.S. must be the leading country helping
the poor and ignorant,“ stated Erdogan.

ARMENIA

In reference to Armenia, Erdogan reiterated that when his party came
to power in late 2002 cargo and charter flights between Yerevan and
Istanbul were authorized. “A short while ago, we began working on
the restoration of the Armenian church on Akdamar island in Lake Van.
For this purpose, we have consulted with the Armenian Patriarch in
Istanbul and requested an Armenian architect. No one can say that we
are actually doing nothing for Armenia. We have no hatred towards
anyone or any group. Armenian lobbyists are working in some countries
to have decisions made against Turkey. The Council of Europe has
declared that Armenia is an occupier in Upper Karabagh. Armenians
must first of all, withdraw from Upper Karabagh,“ expressed Erdogan.

CYPRUS

On Cyprus, Erdogan mentioned that, although the Turkish Cypriots
accepted the Annan Plan and said `yes` to peace and brotherhood in
Cyprus, they have been excluded. “Greek Cypriots were admitted into
the European Union. Turkish Cypriots are still facing international
isolation. What have the Turkish Cypriots done to deserve such an
isolation? How can human right activists justify discrimination that
Turkish Cypriots are facing in the island? The recent visit of the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus by three U.S. congressmen was a
positive development aimed at breaking the political isolation of the
Turkish Cypriots,“ indicated Erdogan.

IRAQ

Asked about his thoughts on Iraq, Erdogan replied that the division
of Iraq into three separate states is a harbinger of a troubled era.
Of course, the Iraqi people will make the final decision, said
Erdogan.

In reference to the issue of headscarves in Turkey, Erdogan explained
that women do not wear, and in fact have never wore, headscarves in
official buildings. “The problem has to do with not letting female
university students wear their headscarves. The society displays
conformity on the issue of headscarves. We must also reach an
agreement regarding the official buildings,“ told Erdogan.

Regarding the EU process for Turkey, Erdogan noted that Turkey`s
journey on the way to EU membership will be a tough one. “However,
we do have a strong group of experts. Efforts will be spent on 35
separate chapters. We will do what is expected from us during the
negotiations,“ commented Erdogan.

Armenia: World Bank Approves A New Rural Development Project

Harold Doan and Associates (press release), CA
July 7 2005

Armenia: World Bank Approves A New Rural Development Project For
Armenia

Press Release – World Bank

The World Bank’s Board of Directors today approved a new credit in
the amount of US$20 million for the Rural Enterprise and Small-scale
Commercial Agriculture Development Project (RESCAD) in Armenia.

With this four-year project, the International Development
Association (IDA) credit will assist the government to support the
development of Armenia’s small and medium-scale rural businesses by
improving the ability of farmers and rural entrepreneurs to access
markets and by stimulating market-oriented private and public
investments in rural areas.

`The agricultural sector continues to be a key sector for the
Armenian economy with significant contributions to the country’s GDP
and employment. The project aims to build on the positive development
of the sector over the past few years and will assist the government
to support the continuing development of the sector,’- said Frauke
Jungbluth, Head of the World Bank team designing the project. `The
project aims to stimulate economic development in rural areas by
supporting commercially-oriented farmers and rural entrepreneurs.`

The main target groups of the project are small and medium-scale
farmers and rural entrepreneurs who would benefit from improved
information services, access to finance, improved inputs and
technologies, and support for marketing activities. The RESCAD
project has been developed within the framework of Armenia’s
Agricultural Sustainable Development Strategy. The project has a
three-tiered approach with emphasis on the farm, agribusiness and
community levels:

The project consists of three major components:

The Rural Business Support Component will focus on improving the link
between production and markets for rural businesses. The component
will aim to enable businesses to develop their supply chains
efficiently, and to expand market opportunities through the provision
of adequate financial services and targeted business support.

The Farm-Focused Development Support Component will enable farmers to
improve their productivity, production quality and market access
through a sustainable advisory system and by increasing availability
of quality planting material.

The Community-Focused Economic Development Support Component’s
objective will be to stimulate economic development at the community
level in selected rural areas through increased capacity of the
communities to plan and manage their resources, and prioritize, fund
and maintain key infrastructure investments with clear market
linkages.

The project will also be supported by a US$ 1.755 million
co-financing Grant from the Japanese Government, supporting the
capacity building and technical assistance activities of the RESCAD
project.

The Credit will be made to Armenia on standard IDA terms, including
40 years maturity and a 10-year grace period.

Since joining the World Bank in 1992 and IDA in 1993, the commitments
to Armenia total approximately US$881 million for 39 operations.

BAKU: Azeri, Pakistani officials to step up fight against terrorism

Azeri, Pakistani officials set to step up fight against terrorism

Azad Azarbaycan TV, Baku
7 Jul 05

[Presenter] Pakistan will not establish ties with Armenia since the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict has not been resolved, Pakistani Interior
Minister Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao, who is visiting Baku, has said. The
minister also said that his country and Azerbaijan intend to step up
the fight against terrorism and human trafficking.

[Correspondent] Pakistan is ready to support Azerbaijan at any level,
Pakistani Interior Minister Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao has said. He said
that the aim of his visit is to expand cooperation between the
countries.

[Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao in English, with Azeri voice-over] I will
meet security and military officials of the country during the
visit. One of the main issues worrying us is the weakness of the two
countries’ joint fight against terrorism and trafficking in human
beings.

I hope that from now on, we will be able to step up our joint fight
against transnational crime.

[Correspondent] The Pakistani interior minister said that they were
ready to give Azerbaijan not only legal but all kinds of support. He
said that Islamabad would not establish any ties with Armenia as the
Nagornyy Karabakh problem has not been resolved.

[Passage omitted: the minister says Pakistan ready to support
Azerbaijan at any level]

We should note that Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao also met Interior
Minister Ramil Usubov. The ministers signed an agreement on
cooperation.

EU Commissioner: Turkey has to open border with Armenia

AZG Armenian Daily #124, 07/07/2005

Turkey-EU

EU COMMISSIONER: TURKEY HAS TO OPEN BORDER WITH ARMENIA

Erdogan: No one can make Turkey open its border with Armenia

Oli Ren, European Union Commissioner for Enlargement, stated that Turkey has
to improve relations with Armenia and open the border. According to
Mediamax, he said that the border-gate opening will be beneficial for
Turkey’s eastern regions as well.

Last week in Baku, Turkish prime minister assured that no one can compel
Turkey to open its border with Armenia. Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that the
recognition of the “so-called Armenian genocide” is the inner business of
Turkey, “It is Turkey that takes decisions concerning this issue not the EU.
We know it well what decision to take”.

Oli Ren said at the session of the Commission on International Relations of
the European Parliament that recognition of “the events of 1915-16” is no
precondition for starting Turkey-EU talks. The EU commissioner expressed
regret that the Turkish authorities postponed the workshop to discuss those
issues at the Bosphorus University.

Ren said that the talks format on Turkey’s EU accession adopted last week is
the harshest ever adopted in the history of the European Union. “We will pay
more attention to real steps and deeds rather than obligations and words”,
considering the experience of the previous stage, he said.

Beware of Tarkanian

*By Gregg Doyel < l>*
*CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer
**June 3, 12:47 p.m.*

Beware of Tarkanian

As we speak, the book college basketball doesn’t want you to read is
being written: Jerry Tarkanian’s tell-all.

And according to author Dan Wetzel, Tarkanian does tell all. After years
of fighting the NCAA and being accused of every recruiting violation
under the sun, Tarkanian has lots to say. Lots to admit, too.

“He’s got stories you wouldn’t believe,” Wetzel says. “He’s out of
coaching. So what does he care?”

No release date has been set, but don’t worry. When the book comes out,
you’ll know it. How? Because people all over the college basketball
landscape will be ducking for cover.

Here’s one excerpt about a high school star who infatuated Tarkanian.
The player’s name and the identity of the opposing school are in the
book, but for now they’ve been left blank by me, because suspense is
better. Use your imagination:

“At one point (the player) wanted me to take his entire high school
team, give them all scholarships just to get him,” Tarkanian says. “As a
compromise I took one player from his high school, (name here), who was
a good student and a good player. I even got (the star’s) girlfriend
into Long Beach State, just one more reason he didn’t ever have to leave
campus.”

Tark learned, though, that his star recruit had been cheating on him
with another college.

“The story was (the player) got a new Corvette. That’s it. (The other
school) gave (him) a new Corvette and was taking all of his high school
buddies. They signed the whole team. … (That team’s coach) cashed in
his teacher’s retirement to get (the player) the Corvette.”

Wow.

http://cbs.sportsline.com/columns/writers/doye

The cleaning power of Vardavar

The cleaning power of Vardavar

Yerkir/Arm
1 July 05

The Armenian Apostolic Church is marking one of its holidays on July
3, known as Vardavar. Traditionally, on that day people pour water on
each other symbolizing their belief that by doing so they clean
themselves of faults, sins and mischief.

Therefore, it would be very nice if our political and public figures
actively participated in this year’s celebration of the Vardavar. The
opposition could, for instance, pour water on the authorities to help
them get rid of their poise and position to see everything in rose
eyeglasses. The authorities, in turn, could pour water on the
opposition to clean them of their pessimism.

Taxpayers and businessmen could “cool” their hearts by “bathing” tax
and customs inspectors. Artists could “water” the culture minister as
much as they wish instead of spreading gossips. Just imagine how
thrilled would drivers feel after pouring water on traffic cops!
Politicians used to offer dull interviews would be exited by dampening
journalists.

Who knows, maybe the Vardavar water could really help us all to get
rid of everything that prevents us from having a strong state,
developed country and a happy and solidified society.