The Witch is the biggest series of its kind out of Greece and Antenna has conjured a second season of the epic period drama. Season two is teed up as a sequel.
George Levendis, Managing Director of Antenna Greece, hosted a screening of The Witch at NATPE Budapest. He is well-known in media circles after a long stint working with Simon Cowell and running international at Syco.
The sophomore season of the fantasy drama will be set before events in the first, and feature a new cast, director Lefteris Charitos explained. Cameras roll in the next few weeks, he told Deadline.
Set in 1817 Ottoman-occupied Greece, in the unconquered region of Mani, the series follows a young woman, Theofano (Elli Tringou), who has visions that lead her to a missing child and also arouse suspicions of witchcraft. As events unfold, she has to save herself and avert a civil war.
Nick Christoforou,...
George Levendis, Managing Director of Antenna Greece, hosted a screening of The Witch at NATPE Budapest. He is well-known in media circles after a long stint working with Simon Cowell and running international at Syco.
The sophomore season of the fantasy drama will be set before events in the first, and feature a new cast, director Lefteris Charitos explained. Cameras roll in the next few weeks, he told Deadline.
Set in 1817 Ottoman-occupied Greece, in the unconquered region of Mani, the series follows a young woman, Theofano (Elli Tringou), who has visions that lead her to a missing child and also arouse suspicions of witchcraft. As events unfold, she has to save herself and avert a civil war.
Nick Christoforou,...
- 6/26/2024
- by Stewart Clarke
- Deadline Film + TV
"It's new, but it's good..." IFC has released the first official trailer for a sultry romantic drama from Greece titled Monday, arriving this spring on both VOD + in theaters. "A spark on a Friday can lead to a sizzling weekend fling, but what happens when you get to the inevitable Monday?" The film follows the love story of Mickey and Chloe, two Americans in their mid-thirties living in Athens, who meet in the heat of summer one whirlwind weekend. Sebastian Stan and Denise Gough star, along with Dominique Tipper, Giorgos Pyrpasopoulos, Elli Tringou, Andreas Konstantinou, and Sofia Kokkali.. This looks fantastic! Full of energy and good vibes, navigating the challenges of love and romance and sex and what it all means, and how to make it all work out. And it really makes me miss traveling around the world so much... Take a look. Here's the official trailer (+ poster) for Argyris Papadimitropoulos' Monday,...
- 3/11/2021
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Movies cannot provide their usual sense of escape with the Covid-19 pandemic still going on, but maybe with the vaccine in sight, one film about a wild weekend romance on the beaches of Athens will help tide things over until summer hits. That’s what Argyris Papadimitropoulos offers audiences in his latest film, “Monday.”
Read More: ‘Monday’ Starring Sebastian Stan and Denise Gough [TIFF] Review
Alongside Sebastian Stan and Denise Gough, “Monday” also stars Dominique Tipper, Yorgos Pirpassopoulos, and Elli Tringou. The film is also the first directed by Papadimitropoulos since 2016’s “Suntan.” Best known as a producer in the Greek film industry, Papadimitropoulos also co-wrote the film.
Here’s the official synopsis:
Read More: The 100 Most Anticipated Films Of 2021
Mickey (Sebastian Stan) and Chloe (Denise Gough), two Americans in their mid-thirties living in Athens, meet in the heat of summer one whirlwind weekend.
Continue reading ‘Monday’ Trailer: Hot Summer Nights...
Read More: ‘Monday’ Starring Sebastian Stan and Denise Gough [TIFF] Review
Alongside Sebastian Stan and Denise Gough, “Monday” also stars Dominique Tipper, Yorgos Pirpassopoulos, and Elli Tringou. The film is also the first directed by Papadimitropoulos since 2016’s “Suntan.” Best known as a producer in the Greek film industry, Papadimitropoulos also co-wrote the film.
Here’s the official synopsis:
Read More: The 100 Most Anticipated Films Of 2021
Mickey (Sebastian Stan) and Chloe (Denise Gough), two Americans in their mid-thirties living in Athens, meet in the heat of summer one whirlwind weekend.
Continue reading ‘Monday’ Trailer: Hot Summer Nights...
- 3/11/2021
- by Ned Booth
- The Playlist
The box-office hit helmed by Angelos Frantzis has snagged eight of the Hellenic Film Academy’s awards, but the ceremony itself has had to be postponed until a later date. After becoming one of the biggest box-office hits of recent years, attracting more than 650,000 viewers before the closure of national cinemas, Angelos Frantzis’ biopic drama Eftyhia has also scooped the Best Film Award and seven more gongs at the 11th edition of the Iris Awards, organised by the Hellenic Film Academy. Produced by Dionyssis Samiotis, the film narrates the life story of one of the most important Greek lyricists, Eftyhia Papagianopoulou, whose songs rose to prominence in the 1950s and 1960s and still remain popular, and who wasn’t widely known or recognised until her death in the early 1970s. The winners were announced online by the academy’s president, Yorgos Tsemberopoulos, as well as actors Elli Tringou and Christos Loulis,...
A middle-aged man’s agonising encounter with a young woman and her friends on a Greek island is full of dour humour
Middle-aged doctor Kostis (Makis Papadimitriou from Chevalier) hauls a lifetime of disappointment along with his suitcase when he arrives on the tiny Greek resort island of Antiparos. It’s the drab depths of the low season, and no amount of optimistic Christmas tinsel can garland the fact that this is a dead end, for career and life. This pre-title sequence has something of the dour humour of Aki Kaurismäki and provides a stark contrast to the main body of the film, set eight months later in August.
After Kostis tends to injured tourist Anna (Elli Tringou), he is granted temporary membership of her gilded circle of beautiful friends. She treats him like a cross between a pet and a beer dispenser; he doggedly manufactures a reality in which they will end up together.
Middle-aged doctor Kostis (Makis Papadimitriou from Chevalier) hauls a lifetime of disappointment along with his suitcase when he arrives on the tiny Greek resort island of Antiparos. It’s the drab depths of the low season, and no amount of optimistic Christmas tinsel can garland the fact that this is a dead end, for career and life. This pre-title sequence has something of the dour humour of Aki Kaurismäki and provides a stark contrast to the main body of the film, set eight months later in August.
After Kostis tends to injured tourist Anna (Elli Tringou), he is granted temporary membership of her gilded circle of beautiful friends. She treats him like a cross between a pet and a beer dispenser; he doggedly manufactures a reality in which they will end up together.
- 4/30/2017
- by Wendy Ide
- The Guardian - Film News
Author: Stefan Pape
We’ve all encountered men like Kostis, you see them sometimes lurking in the background at clubs, sitting at the bar in a pub making smalltalk to anyone who dares stand next to them. Lonely, troubled individuals, despondent and dispirited, longing to be a part of something. Often so concerned with avoiding eye contact, we resist trying to understand them, what’s led them down this destructive path. But it’s here Argyris Papadimitropoulos’ drama Suntan thrives, getting into the protagonist’s head in this intimate character study that centres on the notion of unhealthy infatuation.
Makis Papadimitriou plays Kostis, who moves to a small island, populated by around 800, to become the new local doctor. The mayor boasts the quiet winter months will help to clear his mind, but tedium kicks in. But then the summer arrives, and the island turns into a holiday destination for young...
We’ve all encountered men like Kostis, you see them sometimes lurking in the background at clubs, sitting at the bar in a pub making smalltalk to anyone who dares stand next to them. Lonely, troubled individuals, despondent and dispirited, longing to be a part of something. Often so concerned with avoiding eye contact, we resist trying to understand them, what’s led them down this destructive path. But it’s here Argyris Papadimitropoulos’ drama Suntan thrives, getting into the protagonist’s head in this intimate character study that centres on the notion of unhealthy infatuation.
Makis Papadimitriou plays Kostis, who moves to a small island, populated by around 800, to become the new local doctor. The mayor boasts the quiet winter months will help to clear his mind, but tedium kicks in. But then the summer arrives, and the island turns into a holiday destination for young...
- 4/28/2017
- by Stefan Pape
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
A superbly directed, quietly devastating film about an EasyJet Gustav von Aschenbach who embarrasses himself by falling in love with a younger beauty
Argyris Papadimitropoulos is a Greek film-maker whose work I didn’t know before seeing this unbearably sad story of sexual obsession. His style stands a little outside the black-comic absurdism of contemporaries such as Yorgos Lanthimos and Athina Rachel Tsangari, but he deserves to be as well known as them.
Suntan is tremendously acted, fiercely and instantly absorbing, a tragicomic tale of male midlife breakdown, featuring someone who could possibly be described as an EasyJet Gustav von Aschenbach. Makis Papadimitriou (who was in Tsangari’s film Chevalier) is excellent as Kostis, a plump, bald, middle-aged doctor who, after an unspecified history of personal disappointment, takes up a job as local practitioner on a Greek island whose economy depends on the summer months, when it becomes party central for beautiful twentysomethings.
Argyris Papadimitropoulos is a Greek film-maker whose work I didn’t know before seeing this unbearably sad story of sexual obsession. His style stands a little outside the black-comic absurdism of contemporaries such as Yorgos Lanthimos and Athina Rachel Tsangari, but he deserves to be as well known as them.
Suntan is tremendously acted, fiercely and instantly absorbing, a tragicomic tale of male midlife breakdown, featuring someone who could possibly be described as an EasyJet Gustav von Aschenbach. Makis Papadimitriou (who was in Tsangari’s film Chevalier) is excellent as Kostis, a plump, bald, middle-aged doctor who, after an unspecified history of personal disappointment, takes up a job as local practitioner on a Greek island whose economy depends on the summer months, when it becomes party central for beautiful twentysomethings.
- 4/28/2017
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Stormy awards sees Greek Academy blast government.
Argyris Papadimitropoulos’s (Wasted Youth) drama Suntan was the big winner at the Iris Hellenic Film Academy Awards on Tuesday evening (March 21) winning six prizes out of the 11 for which it was nominated including best film and director.
The film, which played in the Rotterdam, Brussels, Edinburgh, SXSW, Odessa and Jeonju festivals, was also awarded best screenplay, best actor for Makis Padimitriou and best supporting actress for Elli Tringou.
The Faliro House, Marni and Oxymoron production is a bitter sweet drama about a middle-aged doctor on a Greek island whose life turns upside down when he gets embroiled with a group of hedonist tourists.
The film is widely tipped to be Greece’s submission in the best foreign language category at next year’s Oscars.
World sales are handled by Us outlet Visit Films. Strand Releasing is the Us distributor.
Also winning awards was Tasos Boulmetis’ coming of age story...
Argyris Papadimitropoulos’s (Wasted Youth) drama Suntan was the big winner at the Iris Hellenic Film Academy Awards on Tuesday evening (March 21) winning six prizes out of the 11 for which it was nominated including best film and director.
The film, which played in the Rotterdam, Brussels, Edinburgh, SXSW, Odessa and Jeonju festivals, was also awarded best screenplay, best actor for Makis Padimitriou and best supporting actress for Elli Tringou.
The Faliro House, Marni and Oxymoron production is a bitter sweet drama about a middle-aged doctor on a Greek island whose life turns upside down when he gets embroiled with a group of hedonist tourists.
The film is widely tipped to be Greece’s submission in the best foreign language category at next year’s Oscars.
World sales are handled by Us outlet Visit Films. Strand Releasing is the Us distributor.
Also winning awards was Tasos Boulmetis’ coming of age story...
- 3/22/2017
- by alexisgrivas@yahoo.com (Alexis Grivas)
- ScreenDaily
Stormy awards sees Greek Academy blast government.
Argyris Papadimitropoulos’s (Wasted Youth) drama Suntan swept the Iris Hellenic Film Academy Awards on Tuesday evening (March 21) winning six prizes out of the 11 for which it was nominated including best film and director.
The film, which played in the Rotterdam, Brussels, Edinburgh, SXSW, Odessa and Jeonju festivals, was also awarded best screenplay, best actor for Makis Padimitriou and best supporting actress for Elli Tringou.
The Faliro House, Marni and Oxymoron production is a bitter sweet drama about a middle-aged doctor on a Greek island whose life turns upside down when he gets embroiled with a group of hedonist tourists.
The film is widely tipped to be Greece’s submission in the best foreign language category at next year’s Oscars.
World sales are handled by Us outlet Visit Films. Strand Releasing is the Us distributor.
Also winning awards was Tasos Boulmetis’ coming of age story Mythopathy, which won three...
Argyris Papadimitropoulos’s (Wasted Youth) drama Suntan swept the Iris Hellenic Film Academy Awards on Tuesday evening (March 21) winning six prizes out of the 11 for which it was nominated including best film and director.
The film, which played in the Rotterdam, Brussels, Edinburgh, SXSW, Odessa and Jeonju festivals, was also awarded best screenplay, best actor for Makis Padimitriou and best supporting actress for Elli Tringou.
The Faliro House, Marni and Oxymoron production is a bitter sweet drama about a middle-aged doctor on a Greek island whose life turns upside down when he gets embroiled with a group of hedonist tourists.
The film is widely tipped to be Greece’s submission in the best foreign language category at next year’s Oscars.
World sales are handled by Us outlet Visit Films. Strand Releasing is the Us distributor.
Also winning awards was Tasos Boulmetis’ coming of age story Mythopathy, which won three...
- 3/22/2017
- by alexisgrivas@yahoo.com (Alexis Grivas)
- ScreenDaily
Ten Screen critics select their hidden film gems of the year.Fionnuala Halligan, chief film critic
A Date For Mad Mary
Dir Darren Thornton
This big-hearted Irish romcom, which shared the top prize at Galway this summer, has all the smarts to hit with younger audiences should it get the chance. Just released from prison, surly, boozy Mary pines for her bridezilla Bff who has moved on. Now she needs a date for the wedding and rarely has someone looked for love with less interest. Thornton directs a scuzzily radiant Seana Kerslake as the miserably mad Mary, wildly unpredictable and widely misunderstood, in a film that feels like the love child of Weekend and Once.
Contact Mongrel International international@mongrelmedia.com
Tim Grierson, Senior Us critic
The Student
Dir Kirill Serebrennikov
The dangers of religious fervor overwhelming reason is the cauldron into which The Student drops its audience, taking us to a Russian high school where a Bible-quoting...
A Date For Mad Mary
Dir Darren Thornton
This big-hearted Irish romcom, which shared the top prize at Galway this summer, has all the smarts to hit with younger audiences should it get the chance. Just released from prison, surly, boozy Mary pines for her bridezilla Bff who has moved on. Now she needs a date for the wedding and rarely has someone looked for love with less interest. Thornton directs a scuzzily radiant Seana Kerslake as the miserably mad Mary, wildly unpredictable and widely misunderstood, in a film that feels like the love child of Weekend and Once.
Contact Mongrel International international@mongrelmedia.com
Tim Grierson, Senior Us critic
The Student
Dir Kirill Serebrennikov
The dangers of religious fervor overwhelming reason is the cauldron into which The Student drops its audience, taking us to a Russian high school where a Bible-quoting...
- 12/15/2016
- ScreenDaily
Hedi won best film, while Matt Johnson won best director for Operation Avalanche.
The Tunisian-French-Belgian co-production Hedi by Mohamed Ben Attia has won the best film award, the Golden Athena, at the 22nd Athens International Film Festival (September 22-October 2).
The film was co-produced by Tanit Films, Nomadis Images and the Dardenne brothers production outlet Les Films du Fleuve.
Majd Mastoura stars in the lead role as a young man who tries to break loose from his dominant mother and some of Tunisia’s more conservative social norms.
The film debuted at Berlin Film Festival 2016, winning the best first film award and a best actor prize for Mastoura.
The Aiff awards were decided by a five-member international jury presided over by the BFI programmes curator Nicola Gallani. The jury included German film critic Julia Teichmann (Film Dienst), French producer Sylvia Perel and her compatriot film critic Bernard Nave (Jeune Cinema).
Matt Johnson won the best director trophy for [link...
The Tunisian-French-Belgian co-production Hedi by Mohamed Ben Attia has won the best film award, the Golden Athena, at the 22nd Athens International Film Festival (September 22-October 2).
The film was co-produced by Tanit Films, Nomadis Images and the Dardenne brothers production outlet Les Films du Fleuve.
Majd Mastoura stars in the lead role as a young man who tries to break loose from his dominant mother and some of Tunisia’s more conservative social norms.
The film debuted at Berlin Film Festival 2016, winning the best first film award and a best actor prize for Mastoura.
The Aiff awards were decided by a five-member international jury presided over by the BFI programmes curator Nicola Gallani. The jury included German film critic Julia Teichmann (Film Dienst), French producer Sylvia Perel and her compatriot film critic Bernard Nave (Jeune Cinema).
Matt Johnson won the best director trophy for [link...
- 10/3/2016
- by alexisgrivas@yahoo.com (Alexis Grivas)
- ScreenDaily
Here’s your daily dose of an indie film, web series, TV pilot, what-have-you in progress — at the end of the week, you’ll have the chance to vote for your favorite.
In the meantime: Is this a project you’d want to see? Tell us in the comments.
37 Days
Logline: When Maria, a young pregnant woman is fired, she goes on a birth strike. A short film about a dream set in Athens, Greece.
Elevator Pitch:
Maria works at a nail salon. She’s working off the books, without insurance or benefits. She’s also 9 months pregnant. One day, she’s fired. The same night, she has an unsettling dream. She wakes up certain: she won’t go into labor until she gets her job back. And so, Maria’s “birth strike” begins. The initial idea came from my dream. I saw that I was pregnant, I didn’t want to give birth, but it was time. It made me wonder: “What if someone could or thought they could control it?”
Production Team:
Cast: Maria: Elli Tringou
Director: Nikoleta Leousi
Writer: Nikoleta Leousi and Vangelis Serfas
Art Director: Loukia Chouliara
Cinematographer: Nikos Karanikolas
The previous film I directed, “Generator,” has screened at a number of festivals and was presented on Short of the Week.
About the Film:
I’m sure it’s a well-known fact that Greece ranks very low on protecting worker’s rights, collective agreements and job and income security. Female workers in particular are often exposed to unfair labor practices and a violation of the maternity leave and birth benefits. But behind all this, there is a story about believing and trying. That doesn’t mean that you will succeed, but all you can do is try. I want to portray a character that asks the question, “In today’s world, is it worth it to go ‘voluntarily insane’ for an idea? Or is it dangerous?”
Current Status: We’re in fundraising and pre production.
Got a project that you’d like to be featured? Submit to Project of the Day!
Related storiesStriving for Soap Opera Perfection in Hand-Drawn 'Novela'Saving the World with Medical School and Martial Arts in 'Black Kungfu Chick''Salton Sea' Shows a Married Couple in Turmoil at a Fading Desert Resort...
In the meantime: Is this a project you’d want to see? Tell us in the comments.
37 Days
Logline: When Maria, a young pregnant woman is fired, she goes on a birth strike. A short film about a dream set in Athens, Greece.
Elevator Pitch:
Maria works at a nail salon. She’s working off the books, without insurance or benefits. She’s also 9 months pregnant. One day, she’s fired. The same night, she has an unsettling dream. She wakes up certain: she won’t go into labor until she gets her job back. And so, Maria’s “birth strike” begins. The initial idea came from my dream. I saw that I was pregnant, I didn’t want to give birth, but it was time. It made me wonder: “What if someone could or thought they could control it?”
Production Team:
Cast: Maria: Elli Tringou
Director: Nikoleta Leousi
Writer: Nikoleta Leousi and Vangelis Serfas
Art Director: Loukia Chouliara
Cinematographer: Nikos Karanikolas
The previous film I directed, “Generator,” has screened at a number of festivals and was presented on Short of the Week.
About the Film:
I’m sure it’s a well-known fact that Greece ranks very low on protecting worker’s rights, collective agreements and job and income security. Female workers in particular are often exposed to unfair labor practices and a violation of the maternity leave and birth benefits. But behind all this, there is a story about believing and trying. That doesn’t mean that you will succeed, but all you can do is try. I want to portray a character that asks the question, “In today’s world, is it worth it to go ‘voluntarily insane’ for an idea? Or is it dangerous?”
Current Status: We’re in fundraising and pre production.
Got a project that you’d like to be featured? Submit to Project of the Day!
Related storiesStriving for Soap Opera Perfection in Hand-Drawn 'Novela'Saving the World with Medical School and Martial Arts in 'Black Kungfu Chick''Salton Sea' Shows a Married Couple in Turmoil at a Fading Desert Resort...
- 6/15/2016
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
Exclusive: Ryan Kampe’s New York-based sales company has concluded North American and key international deals on Greek director Argyris Papadimitropoulos’ Rotterdam and SXSW selection Suntan, among others.
Strand Releasing has picked up Us and Canadian rights, while deals closed in South Korea (Aud), France (Asc), Australia and New Zealand (Monster), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe).
Suntan is a dark ‘coming-of-middle-age’ drama starring Makis Papadimitriou as a holiday island doctor who becomes infatuated with a tourist.
Papadimitropoulos wrote and directed the film, which also stars Elli Tringou, Milou Van Groessen, Dimi Hart, Hara Kotsali, and Marcus Collen. Odeon will release in Greece and Cyprus.
Morris From America, Chad Hartigan’s Sundance Waldo Screenwriting Award-winner and Special Jury Award-winner for best individual performance for Craig Robinson, has gone to Studiocanal for the UK.
Visit Films has licensed the comedy in Canada (Search Engine), the Middle East (Front Row), Turkey (Kurmaca), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe). A24 snapped up Us rights...
Strand Releasing has picked up Us and Canadian rights, while deals closed in South Korea (Aud), France (Asc), Australia and New Zealand (Monster), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe).
Suntan is a dark ‘coming-of-middle-age’ drama starring Makis Papadimitriou as a holiday island doctor who becomes infatuated with a tourist.
Papadimitropoulos wrote and directed the film, which also stars Elli Tringou, Milou Van Groessen, Dimi Hart, Hara Kotsali, and Marcus Collen. Odeon will release in Greece and Cyprus.
Morris From America, Chad Hartigan’s Sundance Waldo Screenwriting Award-winner and Special Jury Award-winner for best individual performance for Craig Robinson, has gone to Studiocanal for the UK.
Visit Films has licensed the comedy in Canada (Search Engine), the Middle East (Front Row), Turkey (Kurmaca), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe). A24 snapped up Us rights...
- 4/28/2016
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: Ryan Kampe’s New York-based sales company has concluded North American and key international deals on Greek director Argyris Papadimitropoulos’ Rotterdam and SXSW selection Suntan, among others.
Strand Releasing has picked up Us and Canadian rights, while deals closed in South Korea (Aud), France (Asc), Australia and New Zealand (Monster), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe).
Suntan is a dark ‘coming-of-middle-age’ drama starring Makis Papadimitriou as a holiday island doctor who becomes infatuated with a tourist.
Papadimitropoulos wrote and directed the film, which also stars Elli Tringou, Milou Van Groessen, Dimi Hart, Hara Kotsali, and Marcus Collen. Odeon will release in Greece and Cyprus.
Morris From America, Chad Hartigan’s Sundance Waldo Screenwriting Award-winner and Special Jury Award-winner for best individual performance for Craig Robinson, has gone to Studiocanal for the UK.
Visit Films has licensed the comedy in Canada (Search Engine), the Middle East (Front Row), Turkey (Kurmaca), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe). A24 snapped up Us rights...
Strand Releasing has picked up Us and Canadian rights, while deals closed in South Korea (Aud), France (Asc), Australia and New Zealand (Monster), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe).
Suntan is a dark ‘coming-of-middle-age’ drama starring Makis Papadimitriou as a holiday island doctor who becomes infatuated with a tourist.
Papadimitropoulos wrote and directed the film, which also stars Elli Tringou, Milou Van Groessen, Dimi Hart, Hara Kotsali, and Marcus Collen. Odeon will release in Greece and Cyprus.
Morris From America, Chad Hartigan’s Sundance Waldo Screenwriting Award-winner and Special Jury Award-winner for best individual performance for Craig Robinson, has gone to Studiocanal for the UK.
Visit Films has licensed the comedy in Canada (Search Engine), the Middle East (Front Row), Turkey (Kurmaca), and Eastern Europe (HBO Europe). A24 snapped up Us rights...
- 4/28/2016
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: Ryan Kampe’s New York-based sales agency is in Austin, Texas, with three new titles for buyers.
Visit Films holds worldwide rights to SXSW premieres Claire In Motion and From Nowhere in addition to global rights excluding Greece and Cyprus to its previously announced title and Rotterdam premiere title Suntan.
From Nowhere is styled as a revealing, intimate drama that follows three teenagers as they prepare to graduate from high school in the Bronx and must confront their past.
Matthew Newton directed the film and Julianne Nicholson stars with Denis O’Hare, J. Mallory McCree, Octavia Chavez-Richmond, and Raquel Castro.
Claire In Motion (pictured) stars Betsy Brandt as the eponymous character who questions all around her as she learns a secret about her missing husband’s past.
Lisa Robinson and Annie J. Howell co-wrote and co-directed the drama and the key cast includes Anna Margaret Hollyman, Zev Haworth, Sakina Jaffrey, and [link=nm...
Visit Films holds worldwide rights to SXSW premieres Claire In Motion and From Nowhere in addition to global rights excluding Greece and Cyprus to its previously announced title and Rotterdam premiere title Suntan.
From Nowhere is styled as a revealing, intimate drama that follows three teenagers as they prepare to graduate from high school in the Bronx and must confront their past.
Matthew Newton directed the film and Julianne Nicholson stars with Denis O’Hare, J. Mallory McCree, Octavia Chavez-Richmond, and Raquel Castro.
Claire In Motion (pictured) stars Betsy Brandt as the eponymous character who questions all around her as she learns a secret about her missing husband’s past.
Lisa Robinson and Annie J. Howell co-wrote and co-directed the drama and the key cast includes Anna Margaret Hollyman, Zev Haworth, Sakina Jaffrey, and [link=nm...
- 3/13/2016
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Kostis (Makis Papadimitriou) is a middle-aged sad sack who also happens to be a doctor. He arrives on the Greek island of Antiparos around Christmas time when it and its 800 residents resemble more of a way station for the elderly than an island paradise, and he settles into the mundane motions of the job. This isn’t quite the scene he would have chosen for himself, but we suspect that particular choice may have been out of his hands. He makes acquaintances as the weeks pass, but new friendships seem anathema to his preferred daily routine. That changes though with the arrival of summer and the boat-loads of young tourists who follow the sun. A scooter accident brings Anna (Elli Tringou) and her group of highly-sexualized, eternally distracted friends to his clinic. They’re effortlessly obnoxious, but Kostis puts up with their hjinks to look cool in Anna’s eyes. She...
- 3/12/2016
- by Rob Hunter
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
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