Released Date:
1983-10-19
Languages:
Greek
Countries:
Greece
Runtime:
154 min
IMDB Ratings:
7.5 (681 Reviews)
Director:
Nikos NikolaidisThe diary of the life and death of a group of "amoral" young people, who have reached the point of no return and seek something to believe in and to die for. Their behavior brings them to the attention of the State. A discreet surveillance begins. A vigilante group monitors their house, headed by a nameless blonde man.
Released Date:
1987-10-01
Languages:
Greek
Countries:
Greece
Runtime:
108 min
IMDB Ratings:
7.1 (363 Reviews)
Director:
Nikos NikolaidisGenres:
Sci-FiRaymond Chandler (excerpt)
Philip K. Dick (excerpt)
Daphne Du Maurier (excerpt)
Nikos Nikolaidis
Herman Raucher (excerpt)
A woman is walking alone through an abandoned city. She approaches the forbidden zone and tries to pass through. Everywhere the Morning Patrol and deceptive traps are watching. The city itself is alive but uncontrolled. Computer voices warn non-existing inhabitants to leave the city. The communication system works... cinemas show films... classic faces of a past era flash across TV screens. She is confronted by one of the few survivors guarding the city. They will come close to each other ; they will try to recall the past. Together they unravel their tangled memory - threads of this catastrophe and decide to penetrate the zone together ; They are linked by the bonds of violence and death since no other behaviour is possible in this kind of world. Is there an end? Is there hope and any future since no person that was allowed through ever returned to tell us whether the freedom of the sea exists. The fugitives encounter increasing dangers... A story of love in this unbearable world... what point can it have?
Released Date:
1984-10-01
Languages:
Greek
Countries:
Greece
Runtime:
99 min
IMDB Ratings:
7.9 (1722 Reviews)
Director:
Nicos PerakisGenres:
ComedyThe film is the story of a group of soldiers, who, in the course of their compulsory military service in 1967 and 1968, before and during the military dictatorship in Greece, are assigned to the then recently founded Armed Forces Television. This TV station, founded for the civilian population, was run by the Cinematographic Unit of the army which until then had only produced propaganda films and newsreels and was responsible for entertaining the troops and other charity organizations with movie screenings. The personnel was composed mostly of soldiers, who already had experience in the film business in their civilian lives, as well as those who received their training in the army. The story may be only 95% true, but that is simply because the true story is even more absurd...
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