Angelopoulos Retrospective: Alexander the Great

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA, United States

Alexander the Great (O Megalexandros) Greece, 1980 Theo Angelopoulos insisted that Alexander the Great was his “most simple film” to date for its linear structure, beginning on New Year’s Eve 1900 and proceeding from there. The film’s straightforward chronology, however, belies the complex interplay of Greek Orthodox and Byzantine liturgy, music, and ritual that Angelopoulos...

Angelopoulos Retrospective: The Hunters

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA, United States

The Hunters (I Kynighi) Greece, 1977 When a hunting party finds the body of a communist partisan perfectly preserved in the snow, they carry it back to their lakeside lodge to open a formal inquest. Representatives of the  conservative elite—politicians, military officers, businessmen, media figures—who have gathered to celebrate New Year’s Eve 1977, they are...

The East Has Set: A Tribute to the Smyrna Catastrophe

William and Jane Bristol Civic Auditorium 16600 Civic Center Dr, Bellflower, CA, United States

In commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the Catastrophe of Smyrna, this evening event includes a discussion about historical aspects and music of Asia Minor played by an ensemble led by oud-player Dimitri Mahlis.

Angelopoulos Retrospective: The Weeping Meadow

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA, United States

The Weeping Meadow (To Livadi pou Dakryzei) Greece, 2004 A family history told in wide shot, The Weeping Meadow spans the turbulent decades between 1919 and the end of the Greek Civil War in 1949 as they buffet the lives of Eleni (Alexandra Aidini) and her adoptive brother and lover Alexis (Nikos Poursanidis). Taken in...

Evita Arapoglou, “Asia Minor Hellenism: Heyday – Catastrophe – Displacement – Rebirth”

by Zoom

In this lecture, part of the Hellenic Together 4.0 series held in collaboration with the Benaki Museum in Athens, exhibition curator Evita Arapoglou leads us through "Asia Minor Hellenism: Heyday - Catastrophe - Displacement - Rebirth." This program is supported by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF). About the Exhibit Visitors to the exhibition begin their...

Theo Angelopoulos: A Retrospective for the Present (Online panel discussion)

by Zoom

This panel brings together distinguished scholars of Greek cinema to discuss the Greek director's enduring contributions to a global cinema of time, history, and social crisis. Our speakers will discuss various aspects of Angelopoulos’s contemporaneity, from the global impact of his distinctive filmic style and the philosophical dimensions of his visual language to the cinematic...

Angelopoulos Retrospective: The Dust of Time

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA, United States

The Dust of Time Greece/Italy/Germany/Russia, 2008 In a direct reference to Ulysses’ Gaze, The Dust of Time follows a filmmaker named A (here played by Willem Dafoe) on a journey to make a film about his parents. Moving between past and present, memory and history, fiction and reality, the film spans the second half of...

Kouvenda: Hellenic Conversations

by Zoom

Kouvenda: Hellenic Conversations is a bi-weekly discussion forum where members of our community discuss in Greek topics of Hellenic interest. For further information, contact Dr. Simos Zenios (szenios@humnet.ucla.edu).

Angelopoulos Retrospective: The Broadcast; Athens, Return to Acropolis; Reconstruction

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA, United States

The Broadcast (Ekpompi) Greece, 1968 In the manner of Jean Rouch’s Chronique d'un été (1961), the producers of a pop music television show hit the streets to ask women what makes the ideal man. A sharp satire on consumerism and escapism after the military junta known as the Regime of the Colonels seized power the...

Lethal Nationalism: Genocide of the Greeks, 1913-1923

Saint Sophia Cathedral 1324 S Normandie Ave, Los Angeles, CA, United States

Under the fog of war during World War 1, the genocide of the Greeks was carried out at the hands of the Ottoman and Nationalist Turks. This Genocide became the model for all Genocides to follow, Nearly a million Greeks were killed, and millions more were uprooted as part of the Ottoman and Nationalist Turks'...

My Rembetika Blues

Royce Hall, 314 UCLA

Film screening and discussion with filmmaker Mary Zournazi. My Rembetika Blues is a film about the power of music and what makes us human. Rembetika music or the Greek blues is a music of the streets and a music of refugees. The film explores the heart and soul of Rembetika music through peoples’ stories of...

Angelopoulos Retrospective: Ulysses’ Gaze

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA, United States

Ulysses' Gaze (To Vlemma tou Odissea) Greece, 1995 Theo Angelopoulos once confessed to an interviewer, “I would like to believe the world will be saved by the cinema.” Ulysses’ Gaze gives this hope form as a Greek filmmaker known as A (Harvey Keitel) becomes obsessed with finding lost reels of film shot by the Manaki...