Hard
Goodbyes: My Father Movie Review:
Like
Scout in “To Kill a Mockingbird,” a youngster
takes center stage in “Hard Goodbyes: My Father.”
This time, instead of a daughter, it’s a devoted son
who idolizes the father, but with similar heart-tugging
results. Giorgos Karayannis, as 10 year-old Elias, is a
marvel in this touching Greek drama directed and written
by Penny Panayotopoulou. With his stern facial expressions
and wiry body language, this talented lad won my admiration
for carrying an entire movie on his tiny shoulders. On second
thought, that’s not a fair statement. The other cast
members also deliver excellent performances, but little
Karayannis appears in practically every scene and I couldn’t
take my eyes off him.
Elias
loves to play with his often absent father (Stelios Mainas)
and looks forward to the chocolate bars his dad brings him
upon returning from various sales trips. The film takes
place in 1969, so Elias gets excited while talking with
his father about the upcoming moon landing and enjoys listening
to him read from the works of Jules Verne. He hates it when
his mom (Ioanna Tsirigouli) argues with his dad -- almost
as much as when his father leaves to take care of his sales
route.
In a
couple of delightful sequences at the beginning of the film,
director Panayotopoulou does a masterful job of establishing
the close relationship between Elias and his father. I think
that’s one reason we accept the boy’s extremely
bizarre behavior after being told he will never see his
father again. (Karayannis’ convincing acting is the
other reason.) Refusing to believe his father is gone forever,
Elias enters a world of his own – and this part of
the movie emerges as the most effective depiction of denial
I’ve ever seen on film. The boy’s mother, big
brother (Christos Bougiotas), and godfather/uncle (Christos
Stergiogiou) do everything they can think of to bring Elias
back into the world of reality, but to no avail.
However,
on the night of the televised moon landing, everything changes
for Elias. He and his father had promised each other they
would watch this broadcast together -- and they do, in a
strange way. Of course, I can’t reveal how, but I
will tell you it’s a stunner.
In describing
why she decided to make such a unique movie, filmmaker Panayotopoulou
says, “I made this film because I felt real pain for
all those things we lose as we grow up, pain that I wanted
to soothe by telling a story. I created a real hero out
of an innocent little person whose longing would lead him
to free himself from every adult pact with everyday life,
taking the giant step, the first in his life, to rocket
to the stars, there where gravity would no longer have any
importance.”
I’m
not surprised this movie won the Interfaith Award at the
2004 St. Louis International Film Festival. The award recognizes
a film for “its artistic merit, contribution to the
understanding of the human condition and recognition of
ethical, social and spiritual values.”
“Hard
Goodbyes: My Father” certainly deserves such an honor.





Betty Jo
Tucker
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