Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Dreams We Share (The)
  • Chemsex: A Journey Within
  • Christmas Karma
  • Heated Rivalry
  • Goodbye Love
  • Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy
  • Breakwater
  • High Wire
  • Three Loves
  • Woodland
  • Sisterhood
  • Y
  • Tell Me That You Love Me
  • Last Exit Gran Canaria
  • Come See Me in the Good Light
  • 3000 km by Bike
  • Aurora
  • Saving Etting Street
  • Good Child (A)
  • Pawesome!
  • My Brother
  • Girls Like Us
  • Summer School, 2001
  • Wolf Among the Swans (A)
  • Secret of Me (The)
  • Camp
  • Explode São Paulo, Gil
  • French Italian (The)
  • Fuck My Son!
  • La 42
  • Wild Foxes
  • We're So Dead
  • Fraternity
  • Pillion
  • Strike (The)
  • Four Stars
  • Children of Silver Street (The)
  • Spying Stars
  • Weightless
  • Foreign Lands

Black Field

Country: Greece, Language: Greek, 104 mins

Original Title

Mavro Livadi
  • Director: Vardis Marinakis
  • Writer: Vardis Marinakis
  • Producer: Yorgos Lykiardopoulos

CGiii Comment

Very atmospheric, very slow and extremely dull.

A boy is raised as a girl in a convent...and the rest is rather implausible and riddled with plot-holes and obvious errors.

Good cinematography...but, you'll be sound asleep before you can appreciate it.


Trailer...

Black Field from Vardis Marinakis on Vimeo.

The(ir) Blurb...

Greece, 1654. A seriously wounded Janissary arrives at a cloister situated on a cliff, and the sisters take him in and care for him. Sister Anthi, one of those who tends him, falls in love with the soldier and eventually helps him escape. The central focus of the film does not come out of its historical context but is derived from the relationship between the two main characters and, above all, from the quest for freedom and identity for young Anthi. The initially silent sister, hiding a surprising secret, discovers heretofore unknown desires that lead her to a radically altered view of herself.

Cast & Characters

Sofia Georgovassili as Anthi;
Hristos Passalis as The Janissary;
Despina Bebedelli as Igoumeni;
Maria Panouria as Pelagia;
Despina Kourti as Areti;
Evangelia Adreadaki as Dorothea;
Hakan Boyav as Turkish Commander