- A musician playing a glass harmonica comes to a town governed by bureaucracy and corruption. Can the melodies he plays defeat the powers governing this seemingly indifferent group of people?
- A musician playing a glass harmonica comes to a town governed by bureaucracy and corruption. His melodies introduce new ideas in the form of a red carnation, however his instrument is shattered to pieces by the man-in-black, and he is taken in, to be disappeared forever. The carnation withers, but it's found by a young kid who listened to the melodies the musician played, and in his hand, the carnation turns red once again. The young kid leaves town, and comes back as an adult, playing a glass harmonica. The man-in-black shatters the instrument again, but this time thousands of carnations fly around, and the collective power banishes the man-in-black and fight his corrupt power.—Turhan Karadeniz
- In the city, whose inhabitants became corrupted freaks with a thirst for money (a single golden coin in the hands of a dodgy bureaucrat became a symbol of this), a musician with a glass harmonica arrives. The love of money has made the inhabitants monsters, but the melody of the glass harmonica returns humanity to people and they regain their former appearance. First of all, they restore the clock tower that they had destroyed earlier.—Peter-Patrick76 (peter-patrick@mail.com)
- Amid a desolate and cold bourgeois society during challenging times of oppression and censorship, the inhabitants of a once-happy city find themselves under the thumb of a frigid, impassive man in black. But the power of art can entirely transform a person. Suddenly, a young glass-harmonica virtuoso emerges from the thoughtless and grotesque crowd, willing to place himself in harm's way to awaken the dormant creativity of his compatriots and usher in a new era where there is no place for greed, hatred, and envy. However, corruption and money are formidable opponents. Are the citizens doomed to repeat the same mistakes over and over again? Will avarice forever repress beauty?—Nick Riganas
It looks like we don't have any synopsis for this title yet. Be the first to contribute.
Learn moreContribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was The Glass of Harmonica! (1968) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer