- Awaiting for Orpheus to save her from a modern Hades, Euridice faces her fears, desires, hallucinations and memories.
- Euridice lives imprisoned inside a metaphorical hell-house, in a country ruled by a dictatorship regime. Having already served her time, she is waiting to be transferred "somewhere else". However, the State Processor in charge of the prisoners transfers has been mocking her for days... maybe even years. A long lost lover (Orpheus), contacts her asking to see her again. Euridice accepts, hoping that something will change yet she is also afraid of any changes. Orpheus arrives, not as a savior but as the new face of death. Euridice will kill him and will remain in her personal hell forever.—Nikos Nikolaidis
- Stranded in sector BA 2037, Eurydice longs for freedom. And trapped between two worlds, the imprisoned woman meanders through the rooms of a squalid house--an impregnable prison designed to enslave both body and soul. Now, the cherished memory of long-lost lover Orpheus begins to fade away. And the days turn into weeks, which turn into years. Is there an escape from the strange invisible force that commands obedience?—Nick Riganas
- Euridice lives imprisoned in a house -Hades- in a country with dictatorship, waiting ''to be transfered somewhere else''. Those, however, who plan the ''transfers'', fool her for days or years. Her loved one, lost for years -Orpheus- calls her and asks to see her again. Euridice accepts him with hope and fear for the upcoming change. Orpheus comes as a new death, however, and not as a liberator. Euridice will kill him and remain forever in her hell.
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By what name was Evridiki BA 2037 (1975) officially released in Canada in English?
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