PROGRAMMER'S NOTES
The revived Greek Film Festival in New York comes at a time of change in contemporary Greek cinema. Just as the studio era of 1950-70 gave way to the director’s cinema of the post-junta era, that cinema now is giving way to a hybrid cinema that seeks to combine the virtues of its predecessors.

 

Production in the studio era often hit more than a hundred films a year. That fare was mainly composed of comedies, melodramas, and musicals.  The emphasis was on entertainment and performers. Political themes could only be addressed indirectly. On the fringes of this commercial cinema, artistic films such as  O Drakos, Magic City, Stella, and The Girl in Black also were produced. Greek actors such as Melina Mercouri and Irene Papas attained international celebrity status and the music of Mikis Theodorakis and Manos Hadjidakis earned Greek bouzouki world acclaim.

 

The era following the fall of the junta in 1974 shifted emphasis from performers to directors. The artistic vision of the director—a sense that the director is the author of a film—became paramount. Direct expression of political views was now considered one of the natural options open to every director and that option was frequently exercised.  The outstanding film of this era is Thiasos (The Traveling Players) and Theo Angelopoulos, its director, embodies the era’s regard for author-directors.

 

Although numerous  films made by various Greek directors often received international recognition, Greek cinema slowly lost its audience within Greece. Just as popular Greek cinema in its final years often seemed no more than visual junk food gone bad, much of the Greek public began to view the director’s cinema as idiosyncratic and pretentious.  Half of  the roughly twenty Greek films produced in each year of the 1990s had box office attendance of less than 10,000.  At the same time, some of the better studio-era films being shown on television were drawing large audiences and a new wave of low-budget independents attracted a respectable number of viewers.

 

A turning point in contemporary Greek cinema occurred in 2000 with the release of Safe Sex.  This spoof on Greek morality that featured personalities from television had over a million admissions. By attracting the largest audience for any film released that year in Greece, including all the Hollywood blockbusters, Safe Sex demonstrated that there remained a huge national appetite for Greek films.

 

In the years that followed the success of Safe Sex, a new trend began to emerge in Greek film.  While the focus remained on the personal vision and style of the director, more attention was increasingly given to themes and formats that appealed to the popular imagination.  This change, involving many veteran directors as well as newcomers, has been an evolutionary rather than a revolutionary process, and it has remained more intuitive than programmatic. The films being screened at this festival reflect this new trend in Greek cinema. They range from hard-edged dramas to light comedies to surrealistic satires. Some employ cutting-edge technology or the improvisations of low-budget independent films; others rely on tested traditional techniques. Further enriching the festival are three feature-length documentaries that reflect the complexity of Greek culture. They deal with a Greek screenwriter  in Hollywood, the Greek baseball team at the 2004 Olympics, and the Holocaust in Greece.

--Dan Georgakas

 


One hundred percent of the net proceeds from the festival will be sent to an appropriate fund designated to assist the victims of the recent fires in Greece.

For group sales contact
James DeMetro  212-988-1929


SPONSORS'  PASSES AVAILABLE
A $100 pass will support the festival and give you admission to all screenings of every film at the Cinema Village, Nov. 2-8
Contact James DeMetro,
212-988-1929


November 2 - 8
Cinema Village

22 East 12 St.
Between University Place and Fifth Avenue, just east of Fifth
Take the N, R, 4, 5, 6 or L train to
14th Street/Union Square

CINEMA VILLAGE
SCREENING SCHEDULE

Fri. Nov.2
1 p.m.      - Brides
3:25 p.m. - Chariton's Choir
5:40 p.m. - The Wake
7:45 p.m. - Chariton's Choir
10 p.m.    - Brides

Sat. Nov. 3
1 p.m.      - Brides
3:25 p.m. - Back Door
5:30 p.m. - SPECIAL EVENT
                 Who's On First?
Personal appearance
by director Valerie Kontakos

7:25 p.m. - A Touch of Spice
9:30 p.m. - SPECIAL EVENT
                 Heart of the Beast

Personal appearance by director Renos Haralambidis
                 Short film: Kalipolis


Sun. Nov. 4
1 p.m.      - Dust
3 p.m.      - A Touch of Spice
5:05 p.m. - Hostage
7:15 p.m. - A Touch of Spice
9:20 p.m. - Dust
                 Short film: Cosmopolis

Mon. Nov. 5
1 p.m.     - Heart of the Beast
3 p.m.     - The Wake
5 p.m.     - Dust
7 p.m.     - SPECIAL EVENT
              Heart of the Beast            Personal appearance by              director Renos Haralambidis
9:15 p.m. - The Wake
             Short film: Kalipolis

Tues. Nov. 6
1 p.m.      - Brides
3:25 p.m. - Hostage
5:25 p.m. - Buzz
7:40 p.m. - SPECIAL EVENT - CYPRUS NIGHT - Red Thursday
Personal appearance by director Christos Siopachas
10:15 p.m. - Hostage

Wed. Nov. 7
1 p.m.      - Red Thursday
3:10 p.m. - Brides
5:35 p.m. - Red Thursday
7:45 p.m. - SPECIAL EVENT
                 Song of Life Presentation by Marcia Haddad Ikonomopoulos,  Museum Director
of Kehila Kedosha Janina, the only
Greek synagogue in the Western
Hemisphere

9:35 p.m. - Buzz

Thur. Nov. 8
1 p.m.      - Back Door
3 p.m.      - Hostage
5 p.m.      - Chariton's Choir
7:15 p.m. - Back Door
9:20 p.m. - Chariton's Choir
                 Short film: Cosmopolis


November 9 - 15
CineMart Cinema

106-03 Metropolitan Avenue
Forest Hills, Queens, NY
Take the E, F, G or R train to 71 Avenue/ Continental Avenue and transfer to the Q23 bus to Metropolitan Avenue.    Or- take the Q54 bus directly from Williamsburg or Jamaica. Bus stops in front of theater.

Fri. Nov. 9

1 p.m. - Dust

3:20 p.m. –The Wake

5:30 p.m. – Buzz

7:45 p.m. Dust

9:30 p.m. – Heart of the Beast

10 p.m. – The Wake
 

Sat. Nov. 10

1 p.m. – Chariton’s Choir

3:20 p.m. Heart of the Beast

5:20 p.m. – Back Door

7:20 p.m. – Chariton’s Choir

9:30 p.m. – Red Thursday

9:40 p.m. – Heart of the Beast
 

Sun. Nov. 11

1 p.m. – Hostage

3:10 p.m. – Red Thursday

5:35 p.m. – A Touch of Spice

7:30 p.m. Chariton’s Choir

8 p.m. – Red Thursday
 

Mon. Nov. 12

1:30 p.m. – Heart of the Beast

3:45 p.m. – Hostage

6:15 p.m. – Heart of the Beast

7:30 p.m. – Red Thursday

8:15 p.m. – Hostage
 

Tues. Nov. 13

1:30 p.m. – Back Door

3:45 p.m. – Chariton’s Choir

6:15 p.m. – Back Door

7:30 p.m. Heart of the Beast

8:15 p.m. – Chariton’s Choir
 

Wed. Nov. 14

1:30 p.m. – Red Thursday

3:45 p.m. – Hostage

6:15 p.m. – Red Thursday

8 p.m.  - SPECIAL EVENT

                 Song of Life

Personal appearance by
Marcia Haddad Ikonomopoulos

8:30 p.m. - Buzz
 

Thurs. Nov. 15

1:30 p.m. – Dust

3:45 p.m. – The Wake

6:15 p.m. – Dust

7:30 p.m. Heart of the Beast

8:15 p.m. – The Wake

CAUTION:
The films in the festival have not been rated, and some may be inappropriate for young audiences.

All programs subject to change without notice

The Films
A Touch of Spice (Politiki Kouzina)

 

 

 

 

Direction and screenplay
by Tassos Bou
lmetis
Fanis, a professor of astronomy, finds himself compelled to journey back to Turkey after decades of exile in Greece. His return to his birthplace, Istanbul, brings back bittersweet memories of his childhood and of his beloved grandfather who taught him that like food, life requires a touch of spice to give it flavor.  Winner, Best Picture, Thessaloniki Film Festival. Watch the trailer


 

Back Door (Piso Porta)
Direction by Giorgos Tsemberopoulos
Screenplay by Giorgos Tsemberopoulos and Dennis Iliades

This story of a brutal coming of age takes place in 1966 when Greece was wavering between reform and self destruction.  The unexpected death of his father leads thirteen-year-old Dimitris to the belief that his childhood is over. He feels a need to assume all the responsibilities his father bore, including protecting his pampered mother. When an up and coming political star makes advances to his mother, Dimitris becomes alarmed. A succession of betrayals, minor and major, propels him toward an act of vengeance that could alter Greek history.

 



Brides (Nyfes)
Direction by Pandelis Voulgaris
Screenplay by Ioanna Karystiani

In the summer of 1922, the SS King Alexander sails from Smyrna with 700 picture brides (the vast majority young Greek women) bound for New York and waiting husbands-to-be. The complex intersection of the new and old world cultures is embodied in a shipboard romance between  Norman Harris, an American photographer, and Niki, a Greek seamstress. Their story unfolds in a manner that illuminates the hopes, fears and desperation of these courageous young women. (This film is not subtitled, but much of it is in English).

 


Buzz
Direction and screenplay
by Spiro N. Taraviras

One of the most sought-after Hollywood screenwriters of the 1940s and 1950s was A. I. Bezzerides (nickname:Buzz), the immigrant son of a Greek father and an Armenian mother. "Beneath the Twelve-Mile Reef," a tale of Greek sponge divers in Tarpon Springs, and film noir classics "Thieves' Highway" and "Kiss Me Deadly" are among his best known films.  His Hollywood social circle included Humphrey Bogart, William Faulkner, Robert Aldrich and Robert Mitchum. This award-winning documentary journeys to the places where Buzz lived and worked with a revealing look at how Hollywood's production system operated. This film is in English.

 

 



Chariton's Choir
(I Horodia Tou Haritona)

Direction by Grigoris Karantinakis
Screenplay by Grigoris Karantinakis,
Giorgos Makris, Dimitris Vakis

Chariton, a schoolmaster in a provincial town,  believes every woman is beautiful, every wine excellent (if shared), and every day an opportunity for joy. His playful cheerfulness inspires and stimulates the students participating in his great passion, a choir. But these are the junta years, and more than a little cunning is needed for Chariton's positive outlook to prevail. The often tender Chariton is wonderfully rendered by the internationally known Greek actor George Corraface.  Winner, Best Picture, Thessaloniki Film Festival.

 



Dust (I Skoni Pou Pefti)
Direction and screenplay
by Tassos Psarras

Chronis, a successful journalist, lives in Athens with a wife and two children.  Examining archival film footage of the civil war, he sees an image of his father, a royalist, marching in a column of communist guerillas! Chronis becomes obsessed with learning what his father actually believed and how he died. No side comes up stainless as he probes into the complexities of the civil war. Chronis also becomes involved in a sexual relationship that parallels the political enigmas he is trying to unravel.

 

 



Heart of the Beast
(I Kardia Tou Ktinous)

Direction and screenplay
by Renos Haralambidis

Stefanos represents many young contemporary Greek males. Upon completion of his military obligation, all Stefanos owns are debts left by his just deceased mother. Job opportunities are non-existent, and his girlfriend has ditched him. Two boyhood friends, the criminal Tsakiris and the social revolutionary Aris, convince him that robbing the bank where Aris works will solve all their problems. The robbery and its aftermath offer a hilarious look at the foibles of contemporary Greece. Renos Haralambidis in the role of Stefanos leads the mayhem in this Marxian (Groucho) romp.

 



Hostage (Omiros)
Direction and screenplay by Constantine Giannaris
An Albanian immigrant hijacks a bus in Thessaloniki and takes seven passengers hostage. Holding a hand grenade, he demands a ransom of $50 million and safe passage to his homeland. As the bus moves through northern Greece, the narrative alternates between what is going on inside the bus and activities of the police, television crews, desperate relatives and bystanders outside. We learn much about the Albanian, his captives and contemporary Greece. This highly controversial film is based on an event that actually occurred in Greece.

 




Red Thursday (Kokkini Pempti)
Direction and screenplay by
Christos Siopachas

In this film from Cyprus, Angelos longs for the magical day, Red Thursday, when his wildest dreams will come true. Unfortunately, such a day does not exist on any calendar. When he is arrested at a police roadblock with an illegal cargo of cheeses, he lands up in jail. There he meets Alexei, a charismatic Russian adventurer and idea peddler. Little does Angelos know that this meeting will eventually turn his dreams into nightmares.

 



Song of Life (To Tragoudi tis Zois)
Direction and screenplay by Tony Likouressis
The Jewish community on the island of Zakynthos (Zante) was unique in Europe in that it did not lose a single member during the Holocaust. How Bishop Chrysostomos, Mayor Loukas Karrer, and the entire island defied the Occupation forces is the subject of this documentary. Events are examined in detail and given a compelling historical context. The film ends with a joyful reunion of Christian and Jewish neighbors  that reflects the essence of the Greek way of life.

 

 



The Wake (Agripnia)
Direction by Nikos Grammatikos
Screenplay by  Nikos Panayotopoulos and Nikos Grammatikos

This well-crafted crime drama features two estranged brothers who lead very different lives. Andreas is a policeman and Nikos is a priest. The brothers have not spoken for a decade. When Andreas shoots his wife, he turns to his underworld contacts for help in leaving the country before he is arrested. But it is his younger brother Nikos who finally shapes his fate. The eventful night they spend together becomes a de facto wake for Andreas's wife and for the brothers' troubled past.

 

 



Who's On First?
Direction by Valerie Kontakos
As host of the 2004 Olympics, Greece was allowed to bypass all the standard criteria and field contestants in any Olympic sport it chose. Greece had never competed in baseball before, but in 2004 it would field a team. This was due in large measure to the intervention of Greek Americans. Just how that story played out is the subject of this documentary which like the Abbot and Costello routine it is named after is filled with considerable frustration and misunderstanding, but offers plenty of laughs along the way.


 


Short Films

Cosmopolis
Greek American director Alana Kakoyiannis presents a portrait of a small family-owned diner in Astoria where customers and employees find a second home. The individuals who float in and out bring their lives, their stories and  their humanity, forming a microcosm of our society.



Kalipolis
In this award-winning short film by Greek Cypriot filmmaker Minos Papas, a young woman arrives in New York City for the first time and discovers an audio tape left behind by the previous tenant of her apartment. She listens to the tape and is transported on a journey through the city, seen through the eyes of a poet preparing to leave forever.