In the mountains of Armenia, a team of soldiers and scientists engage in a covert operation to stop a group of terrorists. However, their mission takes a dangerous turn when they stumble upon a nest of prehistoric creatures. Now, they must fight for their lives as they try to escape from the terrifying creatures and survive the harsh environment.
Doctor Peter Husak introduces the American Jack Carver to his friend, nurse Kate, and it's love on first sight. But when she learns, in a dramatic incident, that Jack's a C.I.A. agent, she leaves him and marries Husak instead. Together, they go into a war area in Nagorny Karabach for a relief organization.
Architects of Denial is a documentary film that exposes the horrors of the Armenian Genocide, the systematic mass murder of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during World War I. The film examines the denial of this genocide by the Turkish government and highlights the importance of recognizing and acknowledging historical atrocities.
International auditor Alain has arrived to appraise the airport of a small self-proclaimed republic in the Caucasus to green light its eventual reopening. Through Edgar, a local boy running a make-shift business in the airport, Alain will risk all to help this isolated territory to open up.
Robert Sternvall, a German journalist, returns to Artsakh in 2016 to cover the war which has been reignited after a 22-year ceasefire. In the result of his journalistic investigation, Robert meets Sophia, a young opera singer, who happens to be the daughter of missing photojournalist Edgar Martirosyan, whom Robert abandoned in captivity during the fall of the village of Talish in 1992. Robert and Sophia’s frequent rendezvouses ignite a passionate romance...
Endless Corridor is a documentary that delves into the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in the 1990s, specifically focusing on the tragic events that occurred in the town of Khojaly. It explores the massacres of Muslim Azerbaijanis, the Armenian war crimes, and the ongoing tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
A Trip to Karabakh is a movie about a man who embarks on a journey to Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed region in the Caucasus, during a period of political unrest. As he navigates through the complex dynamics and tensions in the region, he encounters personal and moral challenges that force him to question his beliefs and values. The film explores themes of identity, loyalty, and the human cost of war.
In the midst of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, a deaf couple from Azerbaijan and Armenia fall in love, challenging the boundaries imposed by the war. Their journey unfolds against the backdrop of political tensions and personal sacrifices.
A beautiful girl named Sasha from Russia comes to Armenia. Born between Russian father and Armenian mother, Sasha is searching for the grave of her father who died in the Karabakh War. Karabakh, which was the territory of the Azerbaijani Republic during the Soviet Union’s collapse, has many Armenian residents. At the time, Armenians demanded their independence from Azerbaijani Republic and the subsequent conflict caused heavy casualties. Many Russian soldiers also lost their lives in the war. The conflict is still going on. This film is a postscript to a historical event occurred in the early 1990s and about a still ongoing conflict. In the scene that camera quietly crosses the border from Armenia, the director presents an image of each side of the people communicating with one another despite their own wounds instead of one pointing a gun at the other side.
In 2020, when a French robotics student investigates his mother's guarded secret about his true Armenian identity, he jeopardizes his university AI competition to travel to Artsakh and gets entangled in an unexpected full-scale war where he must rely on the evolving consciousness of his AI creation to save his life and learn the truth.
Following the 2020 unprovoked genocidal attack against Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Armenians by Azerbaijan and Turkey that killed 5,000 Armenians, journalist and activist Vic Gerami travels to Armenia to document his ravaged Motherland.
Starting in 1988, a fierce battle raged between the two neighbouring states of Armenia and Azerbaijan (until 1991 part of the Soviet Union) over Nagorno-Karabakh. In 1994, an armistice gave control of Karabakh and the Azeri territory in-between to Armenia. Director Vadan Hovhannisyan shows the footage he shot as an independent war reporter on the front 12 years ago. He runs across the battlefield with a shaky camera, under a fierce shower of bullets. Scrawny soldiers with sunken eyes spend their days smoking, waiting and taking cover in trenches. Fallen comrades are carried down forest paths. Then, Hovhannisyan revisits the soldiers now, bringing prints of stills and frontline footage on his laptop. Although they have put on some weight, many of them are "victims of the peace," as Hovhannisyan calls it in his voice-over.
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