Auction of Souls (1919) Poster

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6/10
Earliest movie depicting genocidal mass murders
springfieldrental30 August 2021
Aurora Mardiganian was an 11 year-old Armenian living in Ottoman Turkey when she witnessed her family butchered in 1915 while she personally was forced to march to Syria, resulting in one-million deaths of her fellow Armenians. She survived the grueling march, only to be sold into slavery. Mardiganian escaped, and through a series of stopovers, finally ended up in New York City, where a young scriptwriter, hearing her story, sat down with her to compose a movie script and accompanying memoirs of her and her people's tragedy.

First National Pictures bought the screenplay and produced the 90-minute recreation of the 1915 Turkish events, releasing "Ravished Armenia," also known as "Auction of Souls" in February 1919. The movie, with Mardiganian playing herself, is the earliest film depicting a genocidal mass murder. Only 20 minutes exist of the movie, but what has survived is the portion of the motion picture illustrating the grisly torture, rape and murders of the Armenians. Filming of the scenes recreating the march was in California and directed by Oscar Apfel, early mentor to a young Cecil B. DeMille. One particular sequenced filmed was especially tragic: towards the end of the movie shows 12 females crucified in the desert. The filming took several hours in the hot sands, resulting in one model contracting influenza and dying several days after the shoot.

"Ravished Armenia" was a perfect fundraiser for relief organizations who aided the Armenians in Turkey and Syria. Charities charged up to $10 per person for each showing before the movie was released to general theaters. The film generated a ton of controversies with its depiction of the flogging of women and their nude crucifixion, prompting several state censor boards, including Pennsylvania, to outright ban its viewing. First National sued the state on the grounds "Ravished Armenia" was an educational film showing the horrors of an ongoing genocidal program in Turkey. The judge ruled against the censor board and allowed its projection.

As for Mardiganian, whom the press called the Joan of Arc of Armenia, she married and lived in Los Angeles the remainder of her life, dying in 1994 at 93 years of age.
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8/10
Prayers Are to No Avail
richardchatten4 November 2023
In 1939 Hitler justified the pogroms perpetrated by his regime by sneering "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" Twenty years earlier Aurora Mardiganian contrived to preempt that boast when her eye-witness account was published in 1918, followed by a film that achieved a great impact but of which today only a small fragment remains.

In a fashion similar to 'Nuit et Brouillard' the bleached out images create the quality of a nightmare. Instead of cattle trucks we see camels against a barren desert, and it's strange to see the perpetrators wearing fezs rather than Nazi uniforms; while the final image of the corpses of naked young woman who have suffered a mass crucifixion resembles a grotesque parody of the road to Calvary.
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10/10
those who forget history are doomed to repeat it
lee_eisenberg25 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
After centuries of imperial powers committing genocide against the colonized peoples, the first documented one made news in 1915, as the Ottoman Turks massacred almost half the Armenian population, a mass slaughter unequaled until the Third Reich. The first movie made about it was Oscar Apfel's "Ravished Armenia", also known as "Auction of Souls", starring survivor Aurora Mardiganian. Most of the movie is now lost, but the surviving part is horrific enough, although Mardiganian later admitted that the crucifixion scene didn't really happen. The Turks made Armenian girls strip, raped them, and made them sit on little pointed crosses, impaling them. No less vicious. Indeed, when Hitler was about to invade Poland, he reportedly got asked how he thought people would remember him, and responded "Who today speaks of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

Alas, this first genocide of the 20th century faded from memory, and Turkey (one of the key US proxies in the Middle East) not only denies that it ever happened, but arrests people for saying that it happened; no surprise that Turkey leads the world in the number of imprisoned journalists.

I understand that one of the first famous people to take up the cause of the Armenians was Jackie Coogan, co-star of Charlie Chaplin's movie "The Kid". As for this one, I see that I'm the first one reviewing it. I had to watch it on YouTube. Other movies focusing on the genocide include "Ararat" and "The Promise".

In a Russian course, I learned about a link to the Russia-Georgia War. Seeing the mass slaughter of the Armenians, the peoples of the Caucasus turned to Imperial Russia for help against the Turks, and nascent countries there eventually became part of the Soviet Union. When they won their independence in 1991, Abkhazia wanted independence from Georgia, but didn't receive it, so the Abkhaz people waged their own war. In 2008, Georgia responded with force, and Russia invaded. (the professor was from Russia, so I got that bias)

To crown everything, the Versailles negotiations further screwed everything up. Most notable was that the reparations imposed on Germany set the stage for Hitler's rise to power. On top of that, Armenia got reduced to a fraction of its former territory, with no access to Mt. Ararat. The Palestinians, Kurds and Yazidis didn't even get their own countries; a British soldier bragged about dropping bombs on "the Arab and the Kurd". It's no accident that the Sykes-Picot Agreement set the stage for the current bloodshed in the Middle East. But lesser known is that a young Ho Chi Minh appealed to Woodrow Wilson, but Wilson (a racist thug if there ever was one) refused to listen.

All in all, I recommend the movie.
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10/10
Must watch!
annieissa22 December 2020
True, amazing... a must watch with true historical facts
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8/10
Ravished Armenia review
JoeytheBrit29 June 2020
Only 20 minutes of this feature-length movie chronicling the genocide of over a million Armenians during WWII survives today, but what remains suggests that this movie was unlike anything to have previously come out of Hollywood. The existing footage is hazy and difficult to follow, but it is still a powerful, and at times harrowing, indictment of the atrocities that members of the human race are capable of inflicting on one another.
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