
May 5, 1993, Volume XXII, Number 42. A Forum for Philadelphians. Since 1971.
Komitas
by Daisy Fried
Komitas (1869-1935) was an Armenian monk, composer and ethnomusicologist. After the Turkish government slaughtered three-quarters of the Ar-menian population- 2 million people in 1915, Komitas (played in this film by Samvel Ovasapian) wrote not another note of music and spent the last 20 years of his life in mental institutions.
This intensely beautiful movie has no plot. It's a visually aural non-linear biography of a land, a people, a life lost. Russian/German-Armenian direc-tor Don Askarian trains a meticulous, excruciatingly slow but ever-moving camera on image after cryptic image, never denying the subjectivity, nor doubting the rightness of what he decides to film.
The hyper-detail keeps the viewer's eyes roving around the screen as the camera backs up to expand the frame, as people move in, out or across, as the camera moves closer to its focus, if that will reveal more. If the camera stops, it seems to tremble with tension.
Segment follows segment - titled the likes of "Hospital,"' "Childhood" and "Journey." Scenes break down. Men sit and play music. One blows a piercing note on a wind instrument which breaks a carafe of milk. The scene changes. There's water and more water. It falls, drips, gushes, and trickles, crumbling what it touches washing things away.
Invariably, something else is re-vealed. In a downpour, the rain comes through a battered wall upon which is a drawing of a seraph. The wall starts to crumble; behind it is a little shelf with two vessels which overflow with brilliant bIue and ochre paint which stains the wall as it runs down.
Obsessive metaphors - fire is another big one - are accessible, obvious enough, but never self-indulgent or over-determined.
A dirt roof cascades onto a man's head. Animals dash and dance, People sit still. A snail crawls, slow as the camera. People act like animals. A man is lifted from a stupor as if he's a charmed snake. Books and musical scores are so much paper.
There are lots of religious images, tablets and scrolls and pictures, priests in full garb with ritual objects. There is detail even in the emptiness of a wall. Any spoken words are less conversation than p9etic declamation.
And there is much sound - sometimes music played by men on screen, sometimes just the sound of things - rain, fire crackling, heels tip-tapping, -shoes scuffing in a hall game, insects buzzing- as though the silence of death and the absence of Komitas' music mike up the noises of everything else.
There's not a speck of gaiety in this movie, but there's a ticklish delight in choices made. For example, a woman (Margarita Woskanian) steps off a lad-der, her long skirt flips, her stockings are seamed; The color of the ribbon on her hat is the same as the paint on the wall.
There are occasional corpses, but Askarian isn't interested in gore. A few scenes of violence are filmed in black-and-white, the sound muffled, the film speeded up. The camera backs off as if in horror and slow-mo's it. The second time we see this scene (we often go back to scenes, with shifted emphasis), we find an old woman who was out of the frame before, kneeling at a broken rave marker, flapping her arms out, clasping her ands, keening, breaking things upon the stone. Askarian seems to be exploring how the mind works remembering, selective.
If you can sit through this movie, you'll be glad you did. It makes meanings just as an obscure poem, a piece of music, a postmodern dance, make meanings - pushing at the audience without resolving. And somehow, sense is made out of bits and pieces of anguish, insanity and revelation.
Other sites:
"Dangerous Light" - The Book by Don Askarian