Why do we need tragedy? The National Theater Company of Korea asks this question with the opening of its ambitious pentalogy, ...
Ninety years after his birth, and as a season of his films begins at the ICA, we suggest a beginner’s path through one of the heavyweights of European arthouse cinema: Greek master Theo Angelopoulos.
It’s really pathetic that things are getting so bad,’ says podcaster-comic Stavros Halkias, ‘that stand-up comedy might, a ...
The metaphor that can be gleaned from the title of Dimitris Nakos’s debut feature, “Meat,” is blatant, maybe too blatant. A primary component of the story is an unregistered slaughterhouse in the far ...
The long-running industry event continues to be a crucial launchpad for filmmakers from Southeastern Europe and the wider ...
As Greece commemorates the 200th anniversary of its War of Independence, a new cinematic tribute to one of its founding heroes has become a battleground ...
The buzzy feature debut of Greek director Thanasis Neofotistos is an allegorical story about a teenager's difficult coming of age in rural Greece.
The descendants of a Jewish couple are suing New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and a Greek foundation over their purchase of a Van Gogh oil painting seized by the Nazis before they fled Germany, ...
A Cyprus court sentences an Israeli businessman to five years in jail for illegally developing Greek Cypriot property in the ...
Celebrate the school’s 50-year anniversary with a prime rib and shrimp fettuccini meal. All proceeds go toward providing ...
The New York Greek Film Expo wrapped up its annual festival with record attendance in its 13 screenings across NYC and New Jersey, including a finale weekend at the Museum of the Moving Image in ...
As the Melbourne Greek Film Festival marks its 30th anniversary, Theo Markos reflects on its early days, passionate founders, and evolution from a small community event in 1993 to a cornerstone of ...