Tasos Psarras

Tasos Psarras Trailers

An All-Weather Man Trailer

Tasos Psarras was born in Thessaloniki in 1948. In 1966 he graduated from the Veterinary School of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki but then turned to cinema. He completed relevant studies at the Thessaloniki Film Theater School, the Stavrakos School of Thessaloniki and the Hatzikos School in Athens. In 1972, he was one of the co-founders of the Thessaloniki Film Club, which was closed by the dictatorship on Easter 1973.

Most Popular Tasos Psarras Trailers

Total trailers found: 7

Numbered Trailer (1998)

13 November 1998

A burglar accidentally kills a wealthy businessman and assumes his identity. He finds life as a playboy very enjoyable, but the deceased man's sister (who lives far away from him) soon starts being suspicious.

Caravan Serai Trailer (1986)

01 October 1986

Set during the Greek civil war. A villager is forced to leave his house and property and go to Thessaloniki with his daughter and son.

The Falling Dust Trailer (2004)

26 November 2004

A 50 year old journalist, son of a civil war hero, who died fighting for the right forces is shattered, when he recognizes him in a documentary, fighting for the communists.

May Trailer (1976)

01 September 1976

The days of May 1936 in Thessaloniki and the events that led to the bloody clashes between the tobacco workers and the army are described in this film in a clear way.

The Factory Trailer (1981)

21 October 1981

A tanner, swamped with debts, must abandon his trade and go work in the local factory.

An All-Weather Man Trailer (2004)

03 December 2004

An approach to the phenomenon of Thanasis Vengos, the man and the artist, through film excerpts, testimonies of his collaborators and relatives and analyses of his symbolic role in the post-war modern Greek reality.

The Reason Why Trailer (1974)

28 September 1974

Michalis returns to the tobacco growers of his rural village after having spent some time in the city and persuades them to form a collective, rather than suffer the poverty-inducing prices they are paid for their crops by tobacco brokers.