SHOULD I STAY OR SHOULD I GO? / BECOMING AN ACTOR/ AFFECTION TO THE PEOPLE / KISMET
Directors Menelaos Karamaghiolis (Should I Stay or Should I Go?), Dimitris Koutsiabasakos (Becoming an Actor), Vassilis Douvlis (Affection to the People) and Nina Maria Paschalidou (Kismet) gave a press conference on Friday, 21 March 2014, in the context of the 16th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival.
Affection to the People is a film about the censorship of Greek films by the junta regime that ruled Greece from 1967 to 1974. “I spent many years researching, because the material was uncategorized and scattered across the Greek Film Archive, the General Archives of Greece, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other places,” said director Vassilis Douvlis. Many Greek filmmakers, including Thodoros Angelopoulos in one of his last interviews, appear in the documentary. “The film shows the absurdity of intolerance and the tricks filmmakers resorted to as they tried to evade censorship. Angelopoulos said that the conditions of the era influenced his style, especially n the film Days of ’36, where he makes extensive use of indirect speech,” added the filmmaker. What often surprised Douvlis were the arguments the censors used in their reviews. For example a Luis Bunuel film was cut because the censor thought it had no artistic value, while a Jean-Luc Godard film was labelled as “the apogee of incoherence.” On the issue of censorship in the modern world, the director said: “Censorship is widespread across the world in authoritarian countries. In modern western societies, censorship has taken a different form. With the resurgence of racism and intolerance, groups of fanatics try to prevent the distribution and presentation of artworks that go against their own set of beliefs. The prevailing atmosphere is often so bleak, that artists resort to self-censorship.”
In Becoming an Actor, Dimitris Koutsiabasakos follows a group of young people who study to become actors. Koutsiabasakos teaches cinema acting and knows from his own personal experience how hard this profession is. “A crucial aspect in any documentary is to establish a relationship of trust with your protagonists. We started shooting only after we had earned that trust. In the script, we decided to use the questions all students ask. That allowed us to see how the young students changed with time, giving different answers to the perennial question of how you become an actor. Studying to be an actor is a process of getting to know your own body and self,” said Koutsiabasakos. The interesting thing is that although young people know that unemployment rates in the profession are close to 90%, they still make a conscious choice to become actors. Perhaps the best way to deal with the current crisis in Greece is by going after our dreams.”
Should I Stay or Should I Go? is named after a documentary theatre performance that inspired director Menelaos Karamaghiolis. “In the film, we see everyday people in Athens and Berlin, taking pieces of their lives and turning them into theatre; we see how the doc format can be adapted to the theatre. In documentary theatre, the play is written during the rehearsals,” noted the director. What surprised the filmmaker was that tickets were sold out both in Athens and Berlin, a sign that the play struck a chord with the audience. The documentary is not only about the art of theatre, however; it is also about immigration. This issue is raised by interviews with immigrants from different generations: from the 70-year-old Gastarbeiter or the woman who left Greece during the junta, to the young Greeks leaving the country because of the recent crisis. “Essentially, this is not a film about art, but about the crisis. Today’s immigrants handle things differently, they are not ashamed to say ‘I have no work’. They try to find a solution, and the play is such a temporary solution. Money is not an end in itself for young immigrants; they may work as cleaners or manual workers, but they keep pursuing their dreams.”
In Kismet Nina Maria Paschalidou presents the influence of Turkish soap operas on the emancipation of women in the Arab and Balkan countries. “Women in Arabic countries find inspiration in the heroines of the Turkish TV series and fight for their rights. For example a woman in Abu Dhabi, who had been abused by her husband and remained, locked inside her house for 12 years with only Fatmagul to keep her company, decided to file for divorce and break free from her domestic prison. Another telling example is Samira, the well-known Egyptian activist, who was sexually harassed by soldiers and then sued the Egyptian army. She eventually succeeded in banning the virginity tests in Cairo,” the director said. She went on to explain that she was impressed with how much, Egyptian women in particular, think of the Turkish series female protagonists as their role models.
The parallel events of the 16th TDF are financed by the European Union’s Regional Development Fund for Central Macedonia, 2007-2013.