Nikos Smaragdis

Nikos Smaragdis Trailers

John the Violent Trailer

Most Popular Nikos Smaragdis Trailers

Total trailers found: 10

I Remember You Leaving All the Time Trailer (1977)

15 November 1977

In Athens, a radical female journalist and a former stage actor share their lives against the backdrop of the regime change, right after the fall of the military dictatorship and the first legislative elections in 1974.

John the Violent Trailer (1973)

29 September 1973

The story of Ioannis Zachos, a young psychopath who commits a murder in Athens.

The Noose Trailer (1987)

01 October 1987

In the fall of 1948, shortly before the end of the civil war in Greece, six young leftists traveled to Athens, boarded a plane to Thessaloniki, and forced the pilot to fly them to neighboring Yugoslavia, where they would seek political asylum along with other comrades.

L'amore Trailer (1979)

01 January 1979

Returning to her small town, Anna, the widow of an Italian soldier whom she married during the occupation, revives her old teenage love in the face of a young worker, whom she marries with her stepdaughter, in order to keep him close to her.

Modest Gods Trailer (1987)

16 September 1987

Cavafy Trailer (1996)

18 June 1996

An ailing, elderly poet reminisces about his life of unrest and homosexual urges.

Love Wanders in the Night Trailer (1981)

01 October 1981

Eirini and Stella are two old maids and sisters who have grown up in the provinces and now live in Athens, in an apartment that looks out onto an open-air cinema.

Refused Trailer (1980)

01 October 1980

Frieda Liappa in this short film casts an alternative gaze on the notion of historicity. Loukia is a teenager currently staying at her cousin’s house in Athens.

The Years of the Big Heat Trailer (1992)

01 May 1992

One woman's lonely search for the truth about her mother's murder.

The Struggle of the Blind Trailer (1978)

03 April 1978

Within the assertive climate of the years after the restoration of democracy in 1974, a fringe group, the blind, many of them beggars, protested by demanding Bread and Education and not Beggary.