It is the early 20th century on a dystopian Greek island. Hadoula, a widow who lost her husband, loannis Fragkos, at a young age, is a woman who has learned how to survive in a male-dominated and extremely patriarchal society. Hadoula carries a difficult burden within her. Like a baton passed on to her from her mother, and the generations before her, she is meant to accept the belittling and degradation of women. Hadoula reacts. Her personal, internal revolution soon comes forth. The victims of her outburst are the little girls of the island, whom she sets free from the social and economic burden that their existence entails by taking their lives. Her actions will bring her face to face with the law. She leaves her home and escapes to her refuge, nature. But as much as her faith and morals dictate that she did the right thing, her trans-generational trauma follows her everywhere. And the end comes as redemption.
A man must face his inner demons when he is confronted with the decision to euthanize his mother, who suffers from an incurable disease.
The true story of the greatest Greek writer of the 20th century, Nikos Kazantzakis, based on his work, Report to Greco, which is, essentially, his autobiography.
A Harvard law graduate, a souvlaki advertiser, a physicist studying Bozonia, an unemployed psychologist, a lifelong student studying sex, and a Chernobyl immigrant outline the 592-euro generation.
Ersi Malikenzou (Thessaloniki, 1940) is a Greek actress.
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