Hiag Avsharian
- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Pulling the Goalie is Hiag's first venture into filmmaking. As the writer and director drawing on his own life experiences, he has a clear vision for the story he wants to tell. Hiag is self-financing the film and hopes to offset some of the production costs with fundraising. Hiag's background is as a business professional running a 100 employee company as President and co-owner for 20 years.
"I have been writing this screenplay on and off again after the birth of our first child Megan (with the help of infertility treatments), nearly 12 years ago. As emotionally difficult as our infertility journey was at times, I became aware of how much more difficult the journey had been for others (e.g. multiple miscarriages). I also learned that infertility is relatively common and on the increase as couples wait until later in life to get pregnant while at the same time nearly all pop culture gives us the sense that it is easy to get pregnant. Furthermore, stories are almost always about men resisting their wives'/girlfriend's desire to start a family, which works for drama and comedy but greatly misrepresents men, and especially men going through infertility. Lastly, and importantly, infertility treatments are expensive and insurance coverage varies widely based on where you happen to live. Thankfully we could afford the level of treatment we needed, but I thought it would be a social injustice if a couple couldn't have a child because they couldn't afford treatments. All in all, I felt like this was a story that I needed to at least try and tell once it had rooted itself in my head."
"I have been writing this screenplay on and off again after the birth of our first child Megan (with the help of infertility treatments), nearly 12 years ago. As emotionally difficult as our infertility journey was at times, I became aware of how much more difficult the journey had been for others (e.g. multiple miscarriages). I also learned that infertility is relatively common and on the increase as couples wait until later in life to get pregnant while at the same time nearly all pop culture gives us the sense that it is easy to get pregnant. Furthermore, stories are almost always about men resisting their wives'/girlfriend's desire to start a family, which works for drama and comedy but greatly misrepresents men, and especially men going through infertility. Lastly, and importantly, infertility treatments are expensive and insurance coverage varies widely based on where you happen to live. Thankfully we could afford the level of treatment we needed, but I thought it would be a social injustice if a couple couldn't have a child because they couldn't afford treatments. All in all, I felt like this was a story that I needed to at least try and tell once it had rooted itself in my head."