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    Home » Director Terry George’s “The Promise” Battles Genocide Denial In Varied Forms

    Director Terry George’s “The Promise” Battles Genocide Denial In Varied Forms

    By SHOOTTuesday, April 18, 2017Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments2586 Views
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    This image released by Open Road Films shows Charlotte Le Bon, from left, Oscar Isaac and Christian Bale in a scene from "The Promise." (Jose Haro/Open Road Films via AP)

    By Jake Coyle, Film Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) --

    “The Promise,” the grandest big-screen portrayal ever made about the mass killings of Armenians during World War I, has been rated by more than 111,300 people on IMDb – a remarkable total considering it doesn’t open in theaters until Friday and has thus far been screened only a handful of times publicly.

    The passionate reaction is because “The Promise,” a $100-million movie starring Oscar Isaac and Christian Bale, has provoked those who deny that 1.5 million Armenians were massacred between 1915 and 1923 by the Ottoman Empire or that the deaths of Armenians were the result of a policy of genocide. Thousands, many of them in Turkey, have flocked to IMDb to rate the film poorly, sight unseen. Though many countries and most historians call the mass killings genocide, Turkey has aggressively refused that label.

    Yet that wasn’t the most audacious sabotage of “The Promise,” a passion project of the late billionaire investor and former MGM owner Kirk Kerkorian.

    In March, just a few weeks before “The Promise” was to open, a curiously similar-looking film called “The Ottoman Lieutenant” appeared. Another sweeping romance set during the same era and with a few stars of its own, including Ben Kingsley and Josh Hartnett, “The Ottoman Lieutenant” seemed designed to be confused with “The Promise.” But it was made by Turkish producers and instead broadcast Turkey’s version of the events – that the Armenians were merely collateral damage in World War I. It was the Turkish knockoff version of “The Promise,” minus the genocide.

    “It was like a reverse mirror image of us,” said Terry George, director and co-writer of “The Promise.” George, the Irish filmmaker, has some experience in navigating the sensitivities around genocide having previously written and directed 2004’s “Hotel Rwanda,” about the early ‘90s Rwandan genocide.

    George bought a ticket to see it. “Basically the argument is the Turkish government’s argument, that there was an uprising and it was bad and we had to move these people out of the war zone – which, if applied to the Nazis in Poland would be: ‘Oh, there was an uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto and we need to move these Jews out of the war zone,’” says George. “The film is remarkably similar in terms of structure and look, even.”

    The nascent production company behind “The Ottoman Lieutenant,” Eastern Sunrise Productions, did not respond to queries for this article. Critics lambasted the film as “revisionist history” that “glosses over genocide.” Salon wondered , “What is Sir Ben Kingsley doing in ‘The Ottoman Lieutenant?’”

    The killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I is widely viewed by genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey, however, denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been inflated, and that those killed were victims of war and civil unrest.

    While the creation of a rival historical drama is fairly unprecedented, Armenians have a long history of roadblocks in Hollywood. The first film to chronicle the genocide was a 1919 silent called “Ravished Armenia.” In the mid ‘30s, MGM began pre-production on an adaptation of Franz Werfel’s “The Forty Days of Musa Dagh,” with Clark Gable to star. But under pressure from the Turkish government, it was scuttled.

    Elia Kazan’s “America America” (1963), an immigrant’s odyssey modeled after Kazan’s family’s own experience, began with persecution of Armenians and Greeks. But the films to most capture Armenian persecution have been made outside Hollywood, by international filmmakers like Atom Egoyan (2002’s “Ararat”) and Fatih Akin (2014’s “The Cut”).

    “The Promise,” bankrolled by the Kerkorian Foundation, was also made totally outside the studio system. Its makers are donating all proceeds to nonprofit organizations, and intend to use the PG-13-rated film as an education tool in schools. Its release has been timed to the April 24 anniversary of the genocide.

    “One of the big things for us was taking the darkness of the Armenian genocide and moving it into the light,” said producer Eric Esrailian, a Los Angeles physician and friend to Kerkorian. “Genocide denial is one phase of genocide. The way systematic denial has tried to crush it and bury the truth for so many years, it’s amazing to see it all come to light now.”

    “The Promise” was modeled after epics like “Doctor Zhivago” and “Casablanca,” charting a love story across wartime. Most of the horrors occur off-screen. Kerkorian, who died in 2015, dreamed of a classical treatment that would render the Armenia plight with the grandeur it has long been denied.

    “It’s still a movie,” said Esrailian. “It’s not a political statement. It’s just the truth.”

    Bale, who plays an Associated Press correspondent in the film, was drawn to the altruistic nature of the project. “To my shame, I knew nothing about the Armenian genocide,” said Bale. “When I first read the script, it was an uncanny moment.”

    He suspects many are like he was: only vaguely aware of the events, even though they were extensively covered by the press at the time. Hitler even cited the lack of remembrance of the Armenians as justification for the Holocaust. Still, the U.S. government in recent decades has declined to classify it genocide, despite the promises of some presidents, including Barack Obama , to do so. Turkey is a valuable NATO ally to the U.S. in, among other things, the fight against the Islamic State.

    “I really only hope that the film can help and not actually exacerbate any problems,” said Bale. “But to me, it doesn’t take a genius to see that there’s an embarrassment to having to acknowledge the atrocities that occurred in the birthing of a nation. It happens to many nations.”

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    Category:News
    Tags:Terry GeorgeThe Promise



    A “Masters” Class In Branding and Fashion

    Saturday, April 11, 2026

    If the world of high fashion has Fashion Week in Milan, with sleek models dressed in avant-garde looks strutting down the runways, then the golf world has the Masters, where players bound down verdant green fairways in azalea-inspired polos, exotic bird prints, the yellows of jasmine and the pinks of the dogwoods.

    Over the last few years, golf apparel companies have begun treating the first full week of April as their moment to shine, unveiling lineups of Masters-inspired drops they hope can capture the attention of those focused on the season's first major.

    The surf-style company Johnnie-O, for example, dips into the Deep South with its classic, understated Azalea Collection. Rhobak likewise offers an Azalea Collection, though with bold flower patterns designed to invoke the feel of being on the grounds of Augusta National. Malbon Golf, meanwhile, offers a "Birds of Georgia" set featuring images of those typically found about the course.

    Yet none of them carry the iconic Masters logo. Or reference Amen Corner. Or use the words "Green Jacket."

    All of those are trademarked by the club — three of nearly 100 trademarks on file — and force outside apparel companies to creatively build their connections to both the tournament and Augusta National without infringing on their intellectual property.

    "Makers of products for mass market dream of becoming a supplier to Walmart. Likewise, high-end brands salivate at the idea of winning a mandate from the Masters," said John Sabino, author of "The Augusta Principles: Timeless Business Lessons from the World's Premier Golf Club." "Apparel companies want to tap into the Masters' high-quality association and leverage the club's exalted brand."

    Yet tapping into that association is... Read More

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