The Promise
Film
Review by Kam Williams
WWI
Saga Revolves around Love Triangle in the Midst of Ethnic Cleansing
It's
Eastern Turkey in 1914, which is where we find druggist Mikael
Boghosian (Oscar Isaac) plying his trade in his
half-Armenian/half-Turkish village where Christians and Muslims get
along swell. The ambitious, young apothecary would really rather be a
doctor, so he strategically courts a neighbor (Angela Sarafyan) from
a relatively-wealthy family just for the dowry.
Those
400 gold coins do enable him to afford med school. However, while
studying in Constantinople, he falls head-over-heels for Ana
(Charlotte Le Bon), a fellow Armenian recently
repatriated from France. The country bumpkin is taken not only with
her pulchritude but with her urbane sophistication ostensibly
cultivated over the course of a childhood spent in Paris.
Trouble is,
Ana has returned accompanied by her lover, Chris Meyers (Christian
Bale), an intrepid, American photojournalist assigned by the
Associated Press to find evidence of ethnic cleansing.
The
plot thickens when World War I erupts. Instead of pursuing Ana and
his M.D., Mikael finds himself fleeing the roundup of innocent
Armenian civilians by the Turkish army. He makes his way back to his
tiny hometown to rescue relatives and friends. Meanwhile, Ana is in a
similar struggle to survive, and her beau does his best to shoot
proof of the savage slaughter rumored to be transpiring.
That
is the dire set of circumstances established at the outset of The
Promise, a riveting docudrama directed and co-written by Oscar-winner
Terry George (The Short). The edge-of-your-seat thriller bears an
uncanny resemblance to Hotel Rwanda, which George directed and
co-wrote, too.
For
both of these films chronicle extraordinary exhibitions of heroism in
the face of a complete collapse of civilization. If this picture
has a flaw, it's that it appears to be trivializing the ethnic
cleansing of one and a half million Armenians when it asks that
holocaust to serve as a mere backdrop to the love story at the center
of the saga.
That
being said, I nevertheless invested in the characters emotionally,
and ended up teary-eyed during the denouement. War may be hell, but
luckily, love still conquers all!
Excellent
(3.5 stars)
Rated PG-13
for mature themes, sexuality, violence, disturbing images and war
atrocities
Running time: 134
minutes
Production Studio:
Survival Pictures
Distributor: Open Road
Films
To
see a trailer for The
Promise,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwut1DUXaZc
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