
Scene from film The Promise (2016) by Terry George.
A movie that portrays a romance taking place during the massacre of Armenians during World War I in what is now Turkey premiers in U.S. theaters on April 21.
The Promise stars Oscar Isaac as an Armenian medical student and Christian Bale as an American foreign correspondent, both of whom fall in love with the same woman.
Their love triangle unfolds as the Ottoman Empire’s entry into the war is followed by the 1915 massacre of Christian Armenians.
Terry George, who directed the 2004 Oscar-nominated historical drama Hotel Rwanda, said shooting The Promise coincided with news of Iraq’s Yazidi religious minority being massacred by Islamic State militants and the mass exodus of Syrian refugees fleeing carnage in their country.
“As we were shooting, we were watching the same events in the same location — people under siege in the mountains and drowning in the Mediterranean,” George said.
While Armenia, many Western historians, foreign parliaments, and scholars say the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians in a period beginning in 1915 constituted an act of genocide, Turkey denies that and contends the Armenians died in partisan fighting.



After surviving a targeted effort by Turkish lobbies to derail its success, the Armenian Genocide film The Promise will open in American theaters next week. And Hollywood celebs are getting the word out, a feature published by NewsBuster MRC said.
Don Cheadle took to Twitter on Monday, April 10 to express his support for the Armenian Genocide-themed drama “The Promise” and pledged to fight the crime against humanity all around the globe.
Variety
(forward.com) Imagine, for a moment, that after the Holocaust the official German position was one of denial. That the German heads of state have, since 1945, consistently asserted that the events of the Holocaust were nasty, yes, but both the Jews and the Germans bear some responsibility, and in the end, well, such things happen in times of war. It’s a disgusting thought. But now, imagine further – not only do the Germans take this position, but much of the world, including the United States, a country whose leaders and soldiers saw the camps and the corpses, participates in the denial. They allude to certain “facts” and “regrettable horrors” but they refuse to utter the only responsible word – genocide. Putrid, no?
by:
Terry George historical romance will hit theaters on April 28