MISS VIOLENCE (2013) - Assistant Art Director
A feature film by Alexandros Avranas
Link in IMDb
Awards:
Silver Lion for Alexandros Avranas, Venice Film Festival
Volpi Cup for Best Actor (Themis Panou), Venice Film Festival
A feature film by Alexandros Avranas
Link in IMDb
Awards:
Silver Lion for Alexandros Avranas, Venice Film Festival
Volpi Cup for Best Actor (Themis Panou), Venice Film Festival
Director: Alexandros Avranas
Cinematography: Olympia Mytilinaiou
Art Directors: Eva Manidaki, Thanassis Demiris
Assistant Art Director: Daphne Koutra
Costume Designer: Despina Chimona
Assistant Director: Elena Dimitrakopoulou
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3078242/
On the day of her birthday, eleven-year-old Angeliki jumps off the balcony and falls to her death with a smile on her face. While the police and Social Services try to discover the reason for this apparent suicide, Angeliki’s family keep insisting that it was an accident. What is the secret that young Angeliki took with her? Why does her family persist in trying to “forget” her and to move on with its life? These are the answers that the people from Social Services look for when they visit the family’s clean and orderly home. The father has made sure nothing is missing and that everything is where it belongs. It seems as if nothing can betray them. But Angeliki’s younger brother unintentionally reveals clues which will gradually shatter the family’s well polished world, forcing them to come face to face with that which, for so many years, they have been hiding or could not bear to see. One by one they will break down, until finally violence will once again offer the solution, keeping the family united and the secret safe.
Cinematography: Olympia Mytilinaiou
Art Directors: Eva Manidaki, Thanassis Demiris
Assistant Art Director: Daphne Koutra
Costume Designer: Despina Chimona
Assistant Director: Elena Dimitrakopoulou
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3078242/
On the day of her birthday, eleven-year-old Angeliki jumps off the balcony and falls to her death with a smile on her face. While the police and Social Services try to discover the reason for this apparent suicide, Angeliki’s family keep insisting that it was an accident. What is the secret that young Angeliki took with her? Why does her family persist in trying to “forget” her and to move on with its life? These are the answers that the people from Social Services look for when they visit the family’s clean and orderly home. The father has made sure nothing is missing and that everything is where it belongs. It seems as if nothing can betray them. But Angeliki’s younger brother unintentionally reveals clues which will gradually shatter the family’s well polished world, forcing them to come face to face with that which, for so many years, they have been hiding or could not bear to see. One by one they will break down, until finally violence will once again offer the solution, keeping the family united and the secret safe.