Film Synopsis
It has been forty years since Azad Zakarian, then just a boy, fled Armenia
and settled in France with his family. Thanks to his parents' selfless
devotion to him, Azad has had the best education a boy of his age could hope
to get himself and now he is a prominent writer, better known by his pseudonym
Pierre Zakar. He leads a comfortable and contented life with his wife
Carole, whom he met on the banks of Lake Geneva. Throughout his life,
Azad has been haunted by his childhood recollections. He was only six
when he left Armenia, but his flight from Turkish oppression is still etched
on his mind. Now in his mid-forties, he feels up to the task of writing
a play inspired by his earliest memories. Entitled
La Chevalière,
the play will allow the writer to reconnect with his roots and reaffirm his
Armenian identity.
As rehearsals for the play get underway at a Paris theatre, Azad invites
his father Hagop to the capital to attend the performance, putting him up
in a posh hotel. Hagop has aged considerably since his son last saw
him and he is looking for more warmth than Azad is capable of offering him.
A silly misunderstanding results in the two men falling out. As the
disappointed old man heads back to his home in Marseille, Azad is left feeling
that he has let him down. This was not what he intended. Azad's
sense of guilt is worsened when his father dies not long afterwards.
Through his highly emotional reunion with his mother, the writer experiences
another rush of memories which will inspire him in his future work...
© James Travers
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