TRIBUTES / RETROSPECTIVES / GIANNIS DALIANIDIS

TRIBUTES / RETROSPECTIVES

YIANNIS DALIANIDIS
THE GENTLE KNIGHT OF POLULAR CINEMA

The most commercial filmmaker of Greek Cinema was born in Thessaloniki and studied at the Drama School of the Thessaloniki Conservatory. After graduating, he went to Vienna, where he studied dance. He started out as a dancer, a choreographer and actor in musical theater, but soon expressed his love for cinema.
In 1949 he appeared as an actor in the film Two Worlds. In 1958 he began writing screenplays. His first screenplay was Crazy Girl. His directorial debut took place the following year, with the film The Scamp, which established him immediately. He continued writing screenplays for romantic comedies and adapting plays which he directed for various production companies up until 1961.

That was the year he began working for Finos Film. His film Downhill was a huge success. Since then he worked exclusively for Finos Film up until 1977, when the company's last film, Training Old Man Yorgis, was made.

In 1962, with his film Some Like It Cold, which was a box-office hit, Dalianidis introduced a film genre which had not existed up unti that point: the Greek musical. The same success accompanied his next musicals (all featuring music by Mimis Plessas), establishing Dalianidis as the master craftsman of this genre. He also made social dramas, starring Zoi Laskari, which were also hugely popular, while he continued adapting plays for the big screen. An extremely prolific filmmaker, he made numerous films each year (most of them on his own screenplays), and was steadily number one at the box-office. The year 1970 marked his debut as a stage director with the play Marijuana Stop. Everything Dalianidis touched turned to gold. Following the end of commercial cinema in Greece, he moved into TV (1974), writing and directing Luna Park, which ran successfully for several years. Another popular series of his was The Lion Cubs. In the early eighties and until 1985, filmgoers flocked to the movie theaters to watch his films about the problems faced by the younger generation, the first of which was The Jackals, in 1981. Starting in 1986 he began making films on video, while his ability to adapt to changing conditions and always retain his unrivaled popularity was verified once again with his successful series made for private television (Penthouse, et al.).

Dalianidis worked with all film genres (drama, comedy, the musical, and the detective film), leaving his personal mark on all of them. Above all. however, his importance stems from the fact that, using his magic wand, he changed the timing and pace of Greek Cinema, by introducing into it an American philosophy. The public followed him faithfully -during the sixties his name was as big as the name of Aliki Vouyouklaki- and, very soon, so did his colleagues. Dalianidis' style of fixed shots, singing, dancing and stylized poses, caused a sensation and made his films immediately recognizable. Greek cinema is divided into the years before and after Dalianidis. He may not have been the greatest director to ever pass through Greek cinema, but he is the one who defined it more than any other.

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