Eternity and a Day

Eternity and a Day (Greek: Μια αιωνιότητα και μια μέρα, Mia aioniótita kai mia méra) is a 1998 Greek film starring Bruno Ganz, and directed by Theo Angelopoulos. The film won the Palme d'Or and the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival.[1] The film was selected as the Greek entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 71st Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.[2][3]

Eternity and a Day
french film poster
GreekΜια αιωνιότητα και μια μέρα
Directed byTheo Angelopoulos
Produced byTheo Angelopoulos
Eric Heumann
Giorgio Silvagni
Written byTonino Guerra
Theo Angelopoulos
Petros Markaris
Giorgio Silvagni
StarringBruno Ganz
Isabelle Renauld
Fabrizio Bentivoglio
Music byEleni Karaindrou
CinematographyYorgos Arvanitis
Andreas Sinanos
Edited byYannis Tsitsopoulos
Distributed byArtistic License Merchant Ivory Productions (U.S.)
Artificial Eye (UK)
Release date
Running time
132 minutes
CountryGreece
LanguageGreek

Plot

Alexandros (Bruno Ganz), a middle-aged bearded writer, leaves his seaside apartment in Thessaloniki after learning he has a terminal illness and must enter a hospital the next day to perform more tests. He is trying to get his affairs in order and to find someone who would take care of his dog. He speaks in his mind to his dead wife, Anna (Isabelle Renauld), who appears still young to him.

Alexandros hides a young Albanian squeegee kid from the police who are arresting other boys like him at a traffic stop in order to deport them. Later, he pays a visit to his 22-year-old daughter (Iris Chatziantoniou), but he doesn't tell her of his diagnosis. Instead he gives her some letters written by her mother, who she reads out loud, triggering his memories of the time when their daughter was a newborn at her baby shower. He learns that his daughter and her husband have sold the family's beach house without telling him. Also, they refuse to keep his dog with them.

On his way back, Alexandros meets the immigrant boy again, and witnesses his capture at the hands of human traffickers who try to sell him into illegal adoption. Alexandros infiltrates the clandestine meeting and in a moment of confusion tries to sneak away with the kid but is stopped by the traffickers and must pay what they ask for him. He tries to put the kid on a bus and then a taxi, but he keeps running away, so he decides to take him across the border to Albania himself.

Alexandros sees at the snowy mountain border an eerie barbed wire fence with what seem to be bodies stuck to it. As the pair waits for the gate to open, they have a change of mind about crossing, when the boy admits he has been lying about his life in Albania. The two of them barely escape a border sentry and make it back to Alexandros's automobile.

The boy's perilous existence brings Alexandros out of his stupor and self-pity, and seemingly re-energizes him in his love for a 19th-century Greek poet, Dionysios Solomos (Fabrizio Bentivoglio), whose unfinished poem he longs to complete. The old man and the boy are connected by fear. The former over what lies ahead for him, and whether his life has had any impact; the latter over the perilous return trip to Albania on a path over the mountains lined with land mines, as well as traffickers.

Alexandros pays a visit to his housekeeper, Ourania (Helene Gerasimidou). She is manifestly smitten with him, but is in the middle of a wedding party and dances between her son and his bride. The scene plays on until Alexandros interrupts. He leaves the dog with her, and then the dance and music, which had stopped, resume as if nothing had halted them.

The boy goes to the ruins of a hospital, mourning another young boy, Selim, via a candlelight vigil, with dozens of other youths. The pair take a bus trip and encounter all sorts of people, from a tired political protester to an arguing couple to a classical music trio. They also look out the window as a trio of people on bicycles pedal by them, oddly dressed in bright yellow raincoats. The boy departs in the middle of the night, stowing aboard a huge, brightly lit ship whose destination is unknown.

Alexandros enters his old home. He looks about, exits out the back door, and into the sunny past where Anna and other friends are singing. They stop, ask him to join them, then they all dance, and soon, there is only the poet and his wife in motion. Then, she slowly pulls away, and he claims his hearing is gone. He also cannot see her, it seems. He calls out and asks how long tomorrow will be, after he had told her he refuses to go into the hospital as planned. She tells him tomorrow will last eternity and a day.

Cast

  • Bruno Ganz as Alexandre
  • Isabelle Renauld as Anna
  • Fabrizio Bentivoglio as the poet
  • Achileas Skevis as the child
  • Alexandra Ladikou as Anna's mother
  • Despina Bebedelli as Alexandre's mother
  • Helene (Eleni) Gerasimidou as Urania
  • Iris Chatziantoniou as Alexandre's daughter
  • Nikos Kouros as Anna's uncle
  • Alekos Oudinotis as Anna's father
  • Nikos Kolovos as the doctor

Soundtrack

The score by Eleni Karaindrou was released on the ECM New Series label in 1998.

Accolades

List of awards and nominations
AwardCategoryRecipients and nomineesResult
1998 Cannes Film FestivalPalme d'OrTheodoros AngelopoulosWon
Prize of the Ecumenical JuryTheodoros AngelopoulosWon
1998 Greek State Film AwardsBest FilmTheodoros AngelopoulosWon
Best Supporting ActressEleni GerasimidouWon
Best DirectorTheodoros AngelopoulosWon
Best ScreenplayTheodoros AngelopoulosWon
Best MusicEleni KaraindrouWon
Best Set DecorationGiorgos Ziakas, Costas DimitriadisWon
Best Costumes DesignGiorgos PatsasWon
gollark: Implode.
gollark: > cloud
gollark: vm-agent seems unnecessary now. I installed VictoriaMetrics only, and it seems happy to use my Prometheus config and scrape everything.
gollark: Bye¡¡¡¡
gollark: I'm using Borg Backup, and it's rather "good".

See also

References

  1. "Festival de Cannes: Eternity and a Day". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 1 October 2009.
  2. Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
  3. "45 Countries Submit Films for Oscar Consideration". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 19 November 1998. Archived from the original on 19 February 1999. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.