While having a day-long swim at Athens’ queer beach, best friends Demosthenes and Nikitas recall the events of a recent summer in the prospect of turning them into a screenplay for Nikitas’ feature debut.
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
6
By CinemaSerf
If you watch an heap of gay cinema, especially from South America, then this kind of story isn’t really that novel. There are plenty where hunky heroes like “Demos” (Yorgos Tsiantoilas) has a best mate “Nikitas” (Andreas Labropoulos) - who is obviously quite keen on his pal who doesn’t really reciprocate in the way he wants, and who takes advantage of the local nudist beach and fairly vibrant gay community to get naked for much of the film and get down to some furious jogging with “Thymios” (Vasilis Tsigristaris) whilst on the rebound from a four year relationship with “Panos” (Nikolaos Mihas) with whom he looks after their dog “Carmen”. Still with me? Well what now ensues is a rather predicable plot wrapped within the concept that the first two characters are thinking of writing a movie about this emotionally charged scenario. Along the way, there is plenty of soul-searching as just about everyone has to deal with their demons and hopefully emerge the better person. There’s a much more continental-style dose of casual shagging that might raise eyebrows amongst those more used to a more Anglicised take on sex with subtle cutaways and perfectly placed pot plants (though it’s not quite “Theo and Hugo” (2016) either). It’s really a film about finding yourself and seeing what’s squarely in front of you, but by using the film-making arc to give the audience a degree of observational objectiveness, it rather made me feel like a prurient fly on a wall where I didn’t always belong (or care). The acting is natural and adequate, it’s beautifully shot and there are plenty of rousing arias to enliven it, but I’m afraid I found it just a bit over-complicated and unoriginal.