Nikos Panayotopoulos' first film (The Colours of the Iris)
was the most unexpected film to come out of New Greek Cinema, because
it
appeared to be skirting the urgent demands of that cinema which,
at the time, were its relation to the necessity for historical memory
(Theo Angelopoulos' Days of '36 and The Travelling Players,
and Pantelis Voulgaris' Happy Day), and the radical viewing
of Greek society (Angelopoulos'
Reconstruction and Voulgaris' The Engagement of Anna).
Panayotopoulos offered another dimension, which was equally important.
His cinema came from the French nouvelle vague, but not as a conventional,
Greek version, an imitation of the freedom and subversion that mainly
Godard had formulated, but as a completely new cinematic proposition,
with a fully emancipated, personal écriture.
For Panayotopoulos had Ðand still hasÐ his own luggage; containing,
first and foremost, irony, an ingredient which is difficult and volatile
in its handling. From the Locarno Film Festival winner The Idlers
of the Fertile Valley, with its painfully self-indulgent upper
class protagonists, to Melodrama? with its unattainable love
and The Woman
Who Dreamed,
and from Varietés to the anguish of existential emptiness in
I Dream of My Friends, the most creative film adaptation of Modern
Greek literature
(in this case the short story collection by Dimitris Nollas) and the
most radical film narrative, Panayotopoulos seems, through his sideways
glance and his irony, to be aiming at a detour, but what he always
achieves is the mining of the essence of things.
This brave confrontation which is not declared before-hand and does
not resort to easy solutions but always maintains an apparently aloof
attitude which is soon humbled into real and sincere pain, found, in
his film Edge of Night, a new direction. Panayotopoulos is
constantly renewing his angles; wandering down the most improbable
paths of expression;
not taking for granted any of his own, hard-earned viewpoints; not
hesitating to undermine his own status of an auteur, for which he has
paid dearly. This element, together with the fact that he is very prolific,
making a film each year, renews and keeps alive everybodyÕs interest
in a filmmaker who has left his own -important and crucial- mark on
Greek cinema, without always getting back his pay-off.
Michel Demopoulos
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