O hamenos ta pairnei ola (2002) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
O hamenos ta pernei ola
soniex16 February 2005
A great movie if we consider that is created by Greek director and actors; it is also filmed in Greece which is not the best country for filming a movie and i guess without the proper (Hollywood) equipment and staff, such as painters, stylists etc.

The star of the movie is Yiannis Aggelakas, who is the leader of the Greek rock band 'Trypes', which is very famous to all Greek and Cypriot people. His acting absolutely matches his role, so as a fan of him i have to give him a big thumb up! The movie is related to drugs and prostitution, and in more general, the underworld of Greece. The movie in the beginning is simple and slow, but in the end it gets more and more exciting unleashing the atmosphere of the underworld making the movie really interesting.

If you are a speaker of the Greek language is worth the time to watch it. It's one of the best Greek movies ever!
16 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
The Poet and the Nihilist
ricardojorgeramalho30 November 2022
The Poet and the Nihilist - Under the appearance of a crime movie, not particularly convincing, Nikos Nikolaidis returns to his favorite theme, the critique of decadent capitalist society, presented here as a mixture of organized crime, corrupt authoritarianism and sensationalist press.

Against such a conspiracy fight an old revolutionary disillusioned and converted to nihilism and a young poet, who, as it should be, is immolated by the flames of this capitalist holocaust.

Nikolaidis in softcore version, signs a film that is watched with interest, although it does not seem like an anthology work.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A great stylist falters
lor_10 August 2015
The late Nikos Nikolaidis, who I'm sure like Ken Russell will someday be belatedly elevated by film historians to the pantheon of greatest cinematic stylists, falters in his penultimate film LOSER TAKES ALL, arresting in early reels visually but ultimately falling apart due to gross sentimentality and over-reliance on cliché & in-joking. For budding filmmakers it serves as an object lesson that nihilism and sentimentality don't mix.

One IMDb-er invoked Jim Jarmusch as a reference point, which I find off-point but useful nonetheless. That is because Nikolaidis fell victim, like Jarmusch and so many other promising directors (Greenaway, the Kaurismakis, Abel Ferrara; name your own poison) to what I term Filmfestival-itis. As a journalist in the '80s I covered film fests and studied their history, back to pioneering Venice and the tourist-attraction known as Cannes (created to attract folks in the off-season to the fabulous Riviera town).

What was once an important phenomenon, say in the '50s and '60s, for discovering talent, creating early-warning-buzz, crystallizing critical opinion and serving as international markets for the buying & selling of film distribution rights, these festivals have proliferated in recent decades to the point of absurdity. Here in NYC, the De Niro-inspired TriBeCa Film Festival, a response to 9/11, has a nearly unrivaled track record of screening thousands of awful movies making it useful, as critics like Rex Reed were laughingly referred to back when, as an inverse barometer of a film's worth -if it was shown at TriBeCa it should be avoided.

For Nikolaidis and an increasing number of filmmakers, festival coverage no longer promotes or introduces a film but rather eats up its potential audience - the filmmaker trading eyeballs for truly paying customers at commercial cinemas. Sure, there are ancillary benefits with video deals, pay-cable and now streaming or VOD exposure, but festival screenings turn out to be the elephants' graveyard for many titles, benefiting the fest's local economy (and backers/staff) but more of a loss leader for a big local party than honest film exhibition as we once knew it before the industry's tail started wagging the dog in the Video Era.

Worse yet is the pernicious effect of pandering to the gatekeepers of the festival circuit, many of whose ancestors I knew back in the '80s -the head honchos at Berlin, Sundance, Edinburgh, etc. A certain type of film catches on with these elites and their sycophants in what remains of the "film critic" world (now a job position as obsolete as "travel agent"). What they like is what they get, accounting for the clichéd nature of so many national cinemas that supply fodder for fests. For example I recall the quirky British stereotypical comedies made in the wake of GREGORY'S GIRL's success over 3 decades back, and still with us today, or the dull results of the "indie" movement of the '80s.

LOSER TAKES ALL falls into this rut, opening with beautiful atmospherics and overt (but in color) homage to film noir, right down to a Raoul Walsh WHITE HEAT poster prominently displayed. But unfortunately we don't have Boetticher, Fuller, Walsh, Siodmak and N. Ray as our heroes any more. Instead Nikos begins with tedious Abel Ferrara clichés and quickly segues to almost a parody of the Aki Kaurismaki ironic approach to cinema: the no-good heroes & heroines, drinking beer, making dumb witticisms or in this case allegorical references as small-talk, and putting up competing cynical world-views while deep-down harboring the most sentimental notions of heroism and camaraderie.

Our hero, rock-musician in real life turned lead actor (and not a good one at that) is certainly out of the Kaurismaki Bros. Game book, and his rottenness (stealing the ring off the finger of the dead mother of another lead character) to comically pawn or idle rape is just a grinning hipness hiding the film's maudlin central heartbeat.

Certain elements remain relevant: the hero's Luddite philosophy is almost poignant (he rejects a cell phone for example) now that the war against rampaging technology has been lost; his insistence on drachmas instead of those horrible Euros is the source of unintended black humor given Greece's on-going fiscal crisis; and the persistent "We gotta get out of this place" theme is still a powerful if overdone message for those of us who came of age in the '60s.

The movie's many crucial faults include a cavalier attitude towards characters, most notably the comic relief drunken beauty who keeps throwing up on the main actress referred to as Black Beauty (Louise Attah, often speaking in English), and the irritating and predictable use of the Leonard Cohen figure (singing his own mournful ballads in English throughout) guitarist whose sentimental end was bad fimmaking at its worst. Similarly, the stunning shots in the first reel are followed by tiresome, poorly staged confrontations in the rest of the film that even crappy action movie directors execute far better than Nikos. Our impervious hero shooting off his gun randomly at baddies is ridiculous on all levels and killed off my involvement in the ongoing story.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
its a beautiful world
wot3127 October 2005
Probably one of the greatest underworld movies ever created in a non-Hollywood environment. Man (gianis aggelakas), a mysterious man of the underworld, small time grifter and big time hard-man,who has an anarchic tendency to mumble and comment on the system, society, police, the underworld itself and other things,

along with his beloved bird, Bellafonte, meets up with an odd posse consisting of kid, who is a young songwriter, a prostitute who gathers money in order to open o bookstore, an alcoholic girl haunted by the relationship with her dead mother, and the grudgey bar-woman-ex-girlfriend. The five of them get caught up in a scheme involving the media, the mob, politicians and the police. And they definitely want to get the hell out of the city, probably to some Caribbean paradise.

This is the third Nicolaides film that has to do with Greek gangland, and the end of his "crime trilogy". Again,like in Glykeia Symmoria, nicolaides makes his own social comments, either using Man as a mouthpiece (mind you the lyrics of Trypes, the band where aggelakas used to sing in are very "socially aware"), or throughout the plot. The violence is still tough, but there is a wee progressive notion in the film, a sense that nicolaides has matured, and is trying to move on to newer things since Glykeia Symmoria, making a film that has the speed of a Jarmusch movie, with an underground storyline.

Trivia one: The most of the outside scenes were filmed in the district of Exarchia (Athens), which was famous in the eighties and the nineties as a place where anarchists, drug addicts, petty criminals and rockers hang out

Trivia two: The house were the rave scene was filmed, was torn down a few weeks after the shoot

Trivia three: The bar were the barmaid is working, was built in 1830. At first it was housing one of King Otthos commissars.During the 20th century it was neglected, or used as a brothel.Since the mid 1980s it houses club decadence, one of the most famous alternative rock bars in Athens
15 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Third-rate shaggy dog story
normmit18 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This Greek "film mavro" (="noir") takes place in the demimonde of Athens. The protagonist, an aging hippie of no name and no fixed address, drinks too much, smokes too much, swears too much, and takes every woman he meets to bed within one minute. Then he steals the woman's jewelry or car and moves on. His total cool fails to impress the police, who beat him up as a suspected druggie/terrorist/undesirable, but it lands him a job with the owner of the local strip club. He is to deliver a drug-filled satchel to some gangsters, and bring back the money. (He is so cool that no-one is even assigned to watch over him!) So, "for the fun of it", he brings along to the rendez-vous a guitar-playing younger version of himself, and several of his most recent conquests. (One is so drunk that she throws up on the lap of another.) Fortunately, both the crooks and the cops are as incompetent as he is. Despite outnumbering him three to one, the gangsters let him beat them up. Meanwhile, the cops travel everywhere in marked cars with their flashers on, so that no-one is unaware of their presence. And they let the protagonist out of a police raid when he glares at them and says "I'm a cop; let me through." In the end, he gives away his money to the women, and prepares to shoot it out with the police (but the film expires first, perhaps out of boredom).

The plot is impenetrable and totally porous. What role does the beautiful blonde stripper play in the movie? Why does the audience see her cooperating with the police in advance of the drug sale, when no cops ever show up then? What is the backstreet between the antihero and the first of his three women? Where does the guitar player come from, and why does he appear in the dreams of the lead man, flying a kite? Why doesn't the hero bring along a fourth woman he had bedded, the teenage girlfriend of the guitarist? Why does the hero replace all the drug powder with flour or sugar since he plans to keep it all anyway? A TV news team is tipped off to the drug sale, but no one notices or cares when they are beaten up by the hero.

In short, this is a third-rate shaggy dog story, in which the lead man embodies every cliché from every tough guy film ever made, but without showing an ounce of brains or empathy. The women are cute, though, and they show a lot of skin, so I will grudgingly give the film two stars.
10 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed