a Blasthttps://ablastfilm.coma film by Syllas TzoumerkasFri, 24 Nov 2017 13:42:10 +0000en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.6INDIEPIX acquires DVD and VOD US rights for A Blasthttps://ablastfilm.com/indiepix-acquires-dvd-and-vod-us-rights-for-a-blast/Fri, 22 Jan 2016 08:30:48 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=435Read More ›]]>Indiepix acquired the DVD and VOD US rights for A BLAST.
Release dates for both formats to be announced soon.

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Syllas Tzoumerkas & Athina Rachel Tsangari talk to Brigitte Häring and SRF Radio Kultur 2 [de]https://ablastfilm.com/syllas-tzoumerkas-athina-rachel-tsangari-talk-to-brigitte-haring-and-srf-radio-kultur-2-de/Sat, 19 Dec 2015 12:34:45 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=430Read More ›]]>«Ich verdichte die realen Geschichten der Menschen»

Er würde nie einen Dokumentarfilm über die Krise drehen, sagt der griechische Filmregisseur Syllas Tzoumerkas, er wolle keine Armutspornographie machen. Also dreht der junge Regisseur Spielfilme, Familiengeschichten. Sie erzählen aus der Krise, von der Krise, aber sie sind Fiktion.

Wie auch die Filme von Athina Rachel Tsangari. Auch sie gehört zur «neuen griechischen Welle». Sie wolle mit ihren Filmen nicht von der griechische Krise erzählen, sagt sie. Und dennoch sei sie eine durch und durch griechische Filmemacherin. Ein Beitrag über die griechische Krise als Narrativ des griechischen Kinos.

Listen to the podcast

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Greek DVD-release for A BLAST | Η ΕΚΡΗΞΗ στα ελληνικά βιντεοκλάμπhttps://ablastfilm.com/greek-dvd-release-for-a-blast/Thu, 17 Dec 2015 12:46:39 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=427Read More ›]]>Κυκλοφόρησε στα βιντεοκλαμπ η ελληνική dvd έκδοση της ΕΚΡΗΞΗΣ (A BLAST) από την Tanweer. Eλληνικοί και αγγλικοί υπότιτλοι, φωτογραφίες από τα γυρίσματα και βίντεο από τις πρόβες, κριτικές, φεστιβάλ, κ.α.

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A Blast in Cypriot cinemas November 20thhttps://ablastfilm.com/a-blast-in-cypriot-cinemas-november-20th/Thu, 19 Nov 2015 18:22:20 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=424Read More ›]]>A Blast in Cypriot cinemas November 20th – Η ΕΚΡΗΞΗ στους κυπριακούς κινηματογράφους από 20 Νοεμβρίου

Λευκωσία / Nicosia (Κ Cineplex & Κ Cineplex @ the Mall of Cyprus), Λεμεσός / Limassol (K CIneplex & Rio Limassol), Λάρνακα / Larnaca (K Cineplex), Πάφος / Paphos (Κ Cineplex @ the Kinghs Avenue Mall)

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A Blast selected for the European Film Showcase 2015 of the American Film Institutehttps://ablastfilm.com/a-blast-selected-for-the-european-film-showcase-2015-of-the-american-film-institute/Thu, 19 Nov 2015 15:28:43 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=423Read More ›]]>American Film Institute (AFI) selects Syllas Tzoumerkas’ A BLAST for this year’s European Film Showcase at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center in Silver Spring in Washington! Screenings: Sat, Dec. 12, 9:40 p.m.; Sun, Dec. 13, 7:15 p.m

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Maria Filini wins the Best Debut by an Actress Award at the Athens IFF for A BLASThttps://ablastfilm.com/maria-filini-wins-the-best-debut-by-an-actress-award-at-the-athens-iff-for-a-blast/Sun, 04 Oct 2015 10:18:25 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=419Read More ›]]>Maria Filini unanimously wins the Best Debut by an Actress Award at the Athens IFF for her performance as ‘Gogo’ in A BLAST!

Maria Filini thanked the jury and the festival, Syllas Tzoumerkas for the trust and the friendship, Youla Boudali & Syllas Tzoumerkas for writing such a monster like Gogo and Maria Drandaki for making it all happen. She dedicated the award to her sister.

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Maria Filinihttps://ablastfilm.com/maria-filini/Mon, 28 Sep 2015 18:35:31 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=414Read More ›]]>Gogo

Maria Filini was born in Nafplio, Greece. She studied acting at the Archi Drama School of Athens. Since 2003, she performed in various stage performances in several venues in Athens, directed by directors Y.Dalianis (Norway, today), Th.Moschopoulos (The Boy With the Suitcase), V.Georgiadou (The Certificate), Th.Glinatsis (Frankenstein), I.Dimadis (Four Little Girls). She performed as an actress in a series of performances by the Blitz Theater Group in several venues in Athens and across Europe (New Order, The House, Katerini, Cinemascope, Late Night), and Vassilis Mevrogeorgiou (A Night in February, Nothing but the Truth co-director, Lions, A Massive Explosion, The Two Gentlemen of Verona). Together with fellow actors Katerina Mavrogiorgi, Vassilis Mavrogeorgiou, Serafim Rodis and Nikos Maramathas she co-funded the Skrow Theater Group and the Skrow Theater venue in Athens. She currently performs and/or co-directs in the Skrow theater’s performances (Up to Now, Absolute Machine, Stories of Self-Sacrifice, etc.). A Blast is her first appearance in a feature film. For her performance in A Blast, she was awarded with the Best Debut by an Actress Award at the Athens International Film Festival. Her upcoming film credits include Yorgos Zois’ Interruption (2015) and Elina Psykou’s Iwo and Sofia (in production).

Filmography

2015
Interruption by Yorgos Zois
2014
A Blast by Syllas Tzoumerkas
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Italy: A BLAST wins the Critics’ Prize at the Otranto FFFhttps://ablastfilm.com/italy-a-blast-wins-the-critics-prize-at-the-otranto-fff/Mon, 21 Sep 2015 16:32:21 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=403Read More ›]]>Italy: Syllas Tzoumerkas’ A BLAST wins the Critics’ Prize at the Otranto FFF! for “its capacity to narrate through its fragmented and sensitive expressivity the desperate and vengeful desire of a woman who, as a modern Medea, looks for her self-affirmation in the frame of contemporary Greece.”

Read more (it) →

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A BLAST in Danish cinemas!https://ablastfilm.com/a-blast-in-danish-cinemas/Thu, 17 Sep 2015 17:45:27 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=400Read More ›]]>A Blast in Danish cinemas from Øst for Paradis! Read the first reviews, screenings, etc. @ ekko, cinemazone →.

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In limbo, radically – Syllas Tzoumerkas for Czas Kultury / Filmicon and Andrzej Marzec [PL & EN]https://ablastfilm.com/syllas-tzoumerkas-for-czas-kultury-and-andrzej-marzec-pl/Sat, 12 Sep 2015 18:00:55 +0000http://ablastfilm.com/?p=395Read More ›]]>Syllas Tzoumerkas’ second film is literally having A Blast in its trajectory in the international festival circuit: Since March 2015, when it opened in a number of theaters in the Netherlands, the film found distribution in Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Poland, and on September 19, 2015 it premiered in Denmark – opening the way for the raving journey of the main character, Maria (Angeliki Papoulia), beyond the borders of the country, beyond the stereotypes in the representation of a young, Greek, female subject ‘in crisis’. The director discussed his method, his references and profound thoughts on filmmaking with Andrzej Marzec, running the distance between the metaphorical and the literal, between individual and collective truths and illusions.

Andrzej Marzec: In my opinion, it is your movie Hora Proelefsis/Homeland (2010), together with Yorgos Lanthimos’ Kynodontas/Dogtooth (2009) that gave rise to a dynamic shift in the history of Greek cinema, and evoked interest in family as a filmic subject. While Lanthimos paints a hermetic, abstract, enigmatic image of an ordinary breadwinner (composing a bizzare parable of family), you create some sort of socially engaged cinema – from the very beginning you are interested in the turbulent changes in the social fabric and civil disobedience. Why did you decide to embark on this cinematographic path?

Syllas Tzoumerkas: Homeland is a film born by rage; rage against both family and country. This is the film’s driving force, in terms of theme and core sentiment. The turbulences you mention in the social fabric, as well as the civil and personal disobedience, are major fields of investigation in the film – I mean the nature of these notions, the ideas that fuel them, the specific actions by which they are expressed. In terms of style (in other words, the way in which the film creates a body of meaning) it’s not a film that works with abstraction, but one that works through accumulation. What I wanted to do in it was to shed light on the behavioral patterns of patronizing and the secretive lies that led to the pitiless generation fights inside the lower-middle-class families – and consequently in the country’s modern political history. A key point for me in the way the film’s narration is built, is the following: I don’t like placing the core parable in a test tube, but I prefer to set it in what we call the very ‘reality’ of things, to the extent of using family photos or TV footage, or throwing the actors into real public events as they occur. To me, there lies hidden an important level of understanding: how are these patterns, or the parable, visually born, how do they fit in, and how do the twist and alter our idea of the reality of historical events. It’s like creating a kaleidoscope, where the existential situations, the psychology, story and history co-exist simultaneously, either in harmony or engaging in endless clashes and contrasts. Overall, Homeland is my version or – to be more accurate in what concerns my intentions – my kick on the corpse of the film (and literature) genre we call ‘family saga in a tormented era.’

AM: You were the first among the contemporary Greek directors to relate in such a determined, bold manner the conflicts within the family with the crisis in society itself. Where does this “family equals society” correlation come from? Is it perhaps an exclusively Greek phenomenon? Can we imagine the society in categories other than blood relationships or kinship?

ST: Growing up in the 80s and 90s in Greece, you could see the strength of the blood relations, the way large families were affiliated to political parties, how a certain lower-middle-class mentality of dreaming of becoming a nouveau-riche ruled the country;[evident] both in individuals, but also the major political groups. This is the audience these parties were addressing to, flattering all their weaknesses and prejudices, and at the same time, always keeping them in their mothering and suffocating embrace. So, this was, and still is, the field of the social crisis, this unbreakable family-society tie. The idea is not new: you can find it all around in theatre and literature, from the ancient Greek tragedies to Dostoyevski’s The Devils and Chekhov. Personally, I despise this notion of blood and the special kind of de facto connection it implies, this ‘we have the same blood, we have the same disease’ kind of connection. And the main reason I despise it and it even scares me, is that it immediately turns grown-up men and women into scared little boys and girls, with all the dreadful psychological characteristics of this dependent age. So, I pictured Homeland like a story drawn from the poem “Mauvais Sang” (Une Saison en Enfer) As Rimbaud says in the poem of the same title and also as a reference to the Blast’s first scene: “Not a family in Europe I don’t know. I mean families like mine, who owe it all to the declaration of the Rights of Man. – I’ve known every good son of good family!”

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Jako pierwszy z greckich reżyserów w zdecydowany sposób wiążesz ze sobą kryzys społeczny i konflikty w obrębie rodziny. Skąd bierze się utożsamienie rodzina=społeczeństwo, czy jest to specyficznie greckie myślenie? Czy można myśleć o społeczeństwie w innych kategoriach niż pokrewieństwo, więzy krwi?

Jeśli dorastało się w Grecji lat 80. i 90., to widziało się siłę więzi rodzinnych, na przykład wówczas, gdy duże rodziny wstępowały do partii politycznych. Jednocześnie niższa klasa średnia o pewnej mentalności, aspirująca do awansu społecznego, kierowała naszym krajem – zarówno jednostkami, jak i czołowymi grupami politycznymi. Rodzina to publika, do której zwracają się partie, schlebiając ich słabościom i uprzedzeniom, a jednocześnie zawsze trzymając ich w duszącym, matkującym uścisku. Nienaruszalna więź rodzinno-społeczna stanowiła i stanowi nadal obszar kryzysu społecznego. To nie jest nowy temat: można go odnaleźć w każdym teatrze i literaturze, od starożytnych greckich tragedii do „Biesów” Dostojewskiego czy Czechowa. Osobiście pogardzam „krwią” i specyficznym rodzajem związku, jaki ona narzuca – tego uwikłania „mamy jedną krew, mamy jedną chorobę”. A głównym powodem, dla którego gardzę nią, co mnie nawet przeraża, jest to, że natychmiast zmienia dorosłych mężczyzn i kobiety w wystraszonych chłopców i dziewczynki ze wszystkimi przerażającymi symptomami psychologicznymi tej epoki uległości.

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