Moneycontrol
HomeEntertainment‘Queer representation in films and television is still lacking a lot’: Greek director Zacharias Mavroeidis
Trending Topics

‘Queer representation in films and television is still lacking a lot’: Greek director Zacharias Mavroeidis

Greek director Zacharias Mavroeidis' 'The Summer with Carmen', which showed at the AFI Fest in Los Angeles, is a spin on the classic rom-com that wears the rainbow shades with pride.

September 29, 2024 / 12:05 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Greek filmmaker Zacharias Mavroeidis at the AFI Fest 2023, Los Angeles, the US. (Photo: Stephanie Cornfield)

Bollywood has for long, from the ’60s to Salman Khan’s Tiger Zinda Hai (2017) for the song Swag se karenge sabka swagat, been visiting the Greek shores to shoot its films and songs, but it has not imbibed the liberal values of the place in its films. Barring Onir and a handful others, the screen representation of the queer community has remained tragic.

To enter the world of Greek director Zacharias Mavroeidis’ warm comedy To kalokairi tis Karmen (The Summer with Carmen), which screened at American Film Institute’s 2023 AFI Fest, is to enter a brightly coloured summer dream, where time seems to linger for some moments more as the deep blue sea breeze rekindles old memories. It is to enter the promise of an old friendship that scorns you but also stands by you when your world turns upside down. It’s a spin on the classic rom-com that wears the rainbow shades with Pride.

Story continues below Advertisement

Demosthenes (Yorgos Tsiantoulas) and Nikitas (Andreas Lampropoulos) are best friends, they are also queer. Demosthenes looks like a Greek god has decided to be born in human form. Mavroeidis represents a heterogeneous range of homosexual men, distinct from one another, to break their stereotyping by the heteronormative world. Demosthenes, as Nikitas says, looks “straight” and gets to play straight roles in films, unlike him. A sighting of a dog on a rocky sea beach reminded them of the summer Demosthenes spent with a winsome Chihuahua, Carmen, in the prospect of turning that into a screenplay for Nikitas’ feature debut. The dog belonged to Demosthenes’ ex-lover Panos (Nikolas Mihas), who, that summer, drifted apart. Demos, clueless about what he has done wrong, takes Panos’ dog in. Carmen brings joy and love into Demosthenes life, even helps him to bond with his estranged mother. Like Aki Kaurismäki’s beautiful new film Fallen Leaves, in the Greek film, too, there’s joy to be found in colour and in the companionship of dogs.

In India, the Supreme Court has declined this year to legalise same-sex unions, dashing the hopes of the LGBTQIA+ community’s hopes. And while the Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, a centre-right politician, has said he’d legalise same-sex marriage at some point, Greece is still one of the most liberal countries in southern Europe, and recognises cohabitation of same-sex couples.