hello, it's me!
this merry-go-round didn't stop yet!
Woo-whoop!
We're gonna take you up really really high, drop you really really low, and you'll go really really fast!
And we'll take you upside down NOT once, NOT twice, but ZERO times!
Please keep your heads, shoulders, knees, and toes inside the ride at all times.
It's a very safe ride, we've only had 6 injuries on it.
![Image](https://i.postimg.cc/g22b7gBc/vlcsnap-2023-07-20-19h53m44s745.png)
не болтай = don't babble
HELLO, IT'S ME! (Frunze Dovlatyan, 1966)
#ArmenCoMo
official synopses (of this film) usually say the following...
He is informed of his sweetheart’s death by a young woman, and soon love blossoms between the lonely doctor and the emerging beauty.
![Image](https://i.postimg.cc/1X6nFmZt/vlcsnap-2023-07-20-21h31m49s191.png)
based on the afore-mentioned, an aspiring viewer gets a false impression he/she is going to watch a "melodrama 2in1" (two love stories in a single film).
don't get fooled!
all you get is one sketchy tragic love story and then endless suspense (to first encounter the second heroine, one has to go through 100 minutes of the prevalently absurdist plot).
if you think, "i don't mind, witnessing a romance of an ephebophiliac physicist with a daddy-issues-girl is worth 100 minutes long suspense", i have to disappoint you.
there is no passion of this kind on display.
the juvenile heroine only drops a few tears while cutting the onion, and the aging physicist heartily embraces only his peer male friend.
but (despite the afore-mentioned) this film is not bringing only disappointment — it's delightful too!
a viewer (of this film) can find delight in getting familiar with Armenian astrophysics and with the charms of Mount Aragats...
The story of Artyom Manvelyan as presented in this film is based on the real-life story of Soviet Armenian physicist Artyom Alikhanyan, who paved the way for the field of nuclear physics in the USSR.
A member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, he is regarded as the father of Armenian physics and was the two-time winner of the USSR State Prize and the Order of the Red Banner of Labor, as well as Lenin Prize.
→
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artem_Alikhanian
In 1942, they initiated a scientific mission on
Mount Aragats in order to search for the third (proton) component of cosmic rays. They found so-called narrow showers in cosmic rays and established the first evidence of the existence in cosmic rays of the particles with masses between that of a muon and proton.
After they founded a cosmic ray station on Aragats at an altitude of 3250 m, the two brothers participated in the foundation of the Armenian Academy of Sciences and established the Yerevan Physics Institute in 1943.
→
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Aragats
Mount Aragats is an isolated four-peaked volcano massif in Armenia. Its northern summit, at 4,090 m (13,420 ft) above sea level, is the highest point of the Lesser Caucasus and Armenia.
![Image](https://i.postimg.cc/MK0Ty3g9/image871.png)