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Cinema of Armenia : ウィキペディア英語版
Cinema of Armenia

The cinema of Armenia was born on April 16, 1923, when the Armenian State Committee on Cinema was established by the government decree.
The first Armenian film with Armenian subject called "Haykakan Sinema" was produced in 1912 in Cairo by Armenian-Egyptian publisher Vahan Zartarian. The film was premiered in Cairo on March 13, 1913.〔Armenian Cinema 100, by Artsvi Bakhchinyan, Yerevan, 2012, pp. 111-112〕
In March 1924, the first Armenian film studio: ''Armenfilm'' ((アルメニア語:Հայֆիլմ) "Hayfilm," (ロシア語:Арменкино) "Armenkino") was established in Yerevan, starting with ''Soviet Armenia'' (1924) Armenian documentary film.
''Namus'' was the first Armenian silent black-and-white film (1925), directed by Hamo Beknazarian and based on a play of Alexander Shirvanzade describing the ill fate of two lovers, who were engaged by their families to each other since childhood, but because of violations of ''namus'' (a tradition of honor), the girl was married by her father to another person. The first sound film, ''Pepo'' was shot in 1935, director Hamo Beknazarian.
More recent directors include:
* Sergei Parajanov (best known for ''The Color of Pomegranates'')
* Henrik Malyan (Best known for Nahapet)
* Artavazd Peleshian (best known for ''The Seasons of the Year'')
* Hamo Beknazarian
* Edmond Keosayan
* Frunze Dovlatyan
* Mikhail Vartanov (best known for ''Parajanov: The Last Spring'')
* Levon Mkrtchyan (Hovhannes Shiraz)
* Atom Egoyan Ararat
* J. Michael Hagopian, for his acclaimed documentaries on the Armenian Genocide, modern Armenian history, and historical Armenia
Modern day Armenian cinema produces two or three features, eight shorts and fifteen documentary films each year.
==See also==

* Cinema of the world
* Armenfilm

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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