Amerika Square (2017) Directed by Yannis Sakardis 7A
The fact that Amerika Square which looks at immigrants to Greece from a variety of different perspectives is small scale and low key does not keep it from being a very good movie. Set around Amerika Square, a hang out in central Athens, best friends Billy, a tattoo artist, and Nakos, nearing 40, out of work and still living at home, have distinctly different points of view about refugees, Nakos considers them vermin to be exterminated while Billy believes most of them to be good people worth helping out in a pinch. As it happens the lives of two immigrants, Tarek a father trying desperately to get to his child in Italy and Tereza a lounge singer beholden to the wrong people, will intersect in different ways with both Billy's and, less directly, Nakos's lives. Ala director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarittu's 23 Grams and Babel, the first-person perspective shifts around a lot in this movie, though on a smaller canvas and on a much more pleasing scale. Though a relatively quiet film, the range is powerful, going from very funny to hard-edged without skipping a beat. While Amerika Square is mostly warm-hearted, that doesn't mean it lacks steel at its core. The ending contains a very clever reference to Casablanca, though it's not one many will relish. One very smart, sad, funny, clear-eyed movie.
Note: Amerika Square is Greece's submission to this year's Academy Awards in the "foreign language" category.
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