muted

Dead Europe

Rating5.3 /10
20121 h 24 m
Australia
773 people rated

In Greece to scatter his father's ashes, Isaac hears of a curse that hangs over the head of his family. Dismissing the idea, his trip begins to unveil dark truths that forced his father to flee years ago.

Drama

User Reviews

Hadeel

15/11/2023 16:02
The first fiction feature film from Tony Krawitz (The Tall Man, etc), Dead Europe is an adaptation of the 2005 novel by Christos Tsoliakis (The Slap, etc). Following the suicide of his father, gay photographer Isaac (noted theatre actor Ewen Leslie)decides to return the ashes to his ancestral homeland in Greece. But his journey reveals some dark secrets about his father's history and a supposed curse. As he tries to unravel the dark and troubling secrets of his father's past life Isaac travels from Greece to Paris to Budapest. Isaac also meets the troubled Josef (Kodi Smit-McPhee), an illegal refugee in hiding, and tries to rescue him from his harsh environment. Isaac also catches up with his estranged brother Nico (Marton Csokas), and is drawn into an underworld of * and sex slavery. This is a bleak and dark vision of contemporary Europe in crisis. Dead Europe explores themes involving death, family secrets, the ghosts of the past shaping the present, the inherent racism and anti-Semitism of Europe, the nature of guilt, and the sins of the father being visited on the son. Krawitz brings an outsider's perspective to his vision of Europe, and shows us visions of cities that are rarely experienced by the average tourist. You can almost feel and smell the physical and moral decay of the place. This dark and disturbing drama has a suitably grimy visual surface and slowly mounting sense of dread. There are a couple of confronting scenes. Cinematographer Germain McMicking uses hand-held camera and works in close-up to disconcerting effect.

Njie Samba

15/11/2023 16:02
Dead worth seeing. The camera and director got out and about - in the mountains of Greece and in the dodgy areas of Paris. Refreshing and raw in turns - I felt like I was sitting in a car with the windows down. I liked the variety and European scope of the locations. The music was peppy not derivative nor bouzouki or Dvorak. Characters were acted easily and convincingly apart from Ewen's which was unconvincing and all earnestness.Also no love interest and no hearts of gold.The characters outgrow the familiar plot. They are well-rounded and never reveal all.In the end we are not sure about any of the characters and what they have revealed. Like at the end of a documentary you are left figuring out just what you have seen. Enjoy the ride as film takes you places you seldom get to see.

💪👀

15/11/2023 16:02
First and foremost, the Greek Tourist Authority (if such a body exists) needs to buy up and destroy every copy of this stodgy moussaka of a movie. It depicts Greece as a giant sh**-hole, populated by demented, ugly, bigoted and frequently dangerous maniacs. Though, to be fair, all the characters in this movie are unpleasant, including our "hero". As Isaac (Ewan Leslie in a tediously one-note performance) moves on, we're treated to the ugliest depiction of Paris ever on film, followed by a similar trashing of Budapest. The point of Isaac's quest is never entirely clear, though it may also be that by the time he finally connects with his brother and is told "the truth" about his father, I'd long since stopped caring. Quite how something like this gets funded is a mystery. Maybe the book it's based on has some worth (I'll never read it now). Maybe it just ticks all the right multi-cultural boxes. Whatever, it reflects well on no-one.

Michael Sekongo

15/11/2023 16:02
source: Dead Europe

Jacky Vike

15/11/2023 16:02
I saw Dead Europe today. I had seen the trailer by coincidence and I found it interesting enough since I follow the things going on in Europe and especially in Greece (I'm Greek). Also I was very curious to see the point of view from an Australian/German/Jewish director for the state of things here, since Australia is so far away. For me the movie is 10/10. In the beginning I had my doubts about the plot and the connection director had made between the story of the main character which seems to be a reference to the Greek cultural traditions and the myths (villages, well-hidden secrets, family relationships etc.) and the economical and political crisis. I expected it to be much less than what it actually is. It is a very serious, important and true movie.

lesvideosdejoel

15/11/2023 16:01
I just have finished reading "Damascus" by the same author, which frankly makes Dead Europe, which I read a couple of years ago, seem like a lighthearted novel. But beyond that I have to say of this film that is an absolutely terrible adaption of the novel, perhaps the worst adaption I have ever seen. Darkness in the novel into insufferable (and interminable) sulking moroseness's, the supernatural elements are handled clumsily, and even the bigotry it seeks to illuminate is made shrill instead of heinous and cruel. The acting and general directing is also just a mess. I would recommend to everyone who is going to watch the to read both the novel by the same name and Damascus which was just released. with Damascus you get a true sense of where the hatred comes into Greece, and by extension from: Exported from the Middle East to Greece which until that point had been extremely tolerant of differences, and for example homosexuality. There are several levels of irony, concerning several types of intolerance the film seeks to showcase to be found rooted there as well.

Queenና Samuel

15/11/2023 16:01
(only contains spoilers of a general kind) Disturbing, intense and creepy, this film at one level is a fairly straightforward story of a man who travels to his father's homeland and discovers the skeletons in the closet. Ewen Leslie as the haunted son Isaac seeking to lay the ghost of his dad Vasili in the mountains of Greece, Martin Csokas as his corrupted brother Nico and Kodi Smit-McPhee as the face of all refugee boys everywhere all do a fine job, the cinematography, score and directing work together well to create a menacing and disorienting view of the seedier side of Europe. At another level, this film explores the moral complexities of the refugee crisis. The curse that seems to follow Vasili's family can be interpreted as the guilt that lurks behind every decision to turn your back on another human being in desperate straits. And how easy it is to do that, given their overwhelming need, their anonymity, their foreignness, and the sometimes bald ugliness of their desperation. This film takes you unflinchingly into the heart of this "blackness" that consumed the soul of Vasili and eventually his sons, it slaps you unapologetically in the face with it. Vasili himself is a refugee, fleeing the devastation of post war Greece to Australia. Perhaps there's no guilt like that of a refugee who has left others to perish. There's no light at the end of this film, which I think is particularly fitting because there is no easy answer to the desperation of the millions fleeing to Europe and scraping an existence in the decrepit slums and alleys of the grand old cities. Just as it has for thousands of years, the situation fosters prejudice, exploitation and cruelty on all sides. You will appreciate this film, if not enjoy it, if you are interested in what is, and always has been, one of the greatest social, moral and even spiritual challenges to the illusions of our comfortable and sheltered lives.

𝐑.𝐆

15/11/2023 16:01
Those who lusted after Alex Dimitriades masturbating in 'Head On' may be interested in another adaptation of a Christos Tsiolkas novel, 'Dead Europe' - and they'd be disappointed, at least if they're watching it purely for the totty value. Once again it's set in the Greek community of Australia, as a self-obsessed photographer takes his father's ashes back to Greece. Once there he finds himself haunted by a mysterious boy and gradually uncovers a mystery involving his father's activities during World War Two. It's not a bad story - I'd watch the film again - but there's no-one particularly attractive in it, neither physically nor emotionally (I'm not *that* shallow!)

jirakitth_c

15/11/2023 16:01
I saw this last night at the Melbourne Film Festival and had to be on my best behavior because the cast and crew were sitting directly behind me. I haven't read the book this is based on so I can't comment on it's adaptation but I did walk away thinking that this 84 minute film was about 10 minutes too long. Plenty of arty farty pretentious scenes that just had no need to be there IMO. None of the characters have been fleshed out - a glaring weakness by the writer and the lead, Leslie, delivered a frustratingly one note performance. There is only so many times one can deliver the 'F' word in a performance. There apparently is a very interesting story about people's pasts in the book - but this sadly didn't come across in the film. A very disappointing film.

DJZinhle

15/11/2023 16:01
This film was a big disappointing treatment of the book of the same title. Dead Europe was a bleak, dense novel, almost hallucinogenic, but quite compelling. You were never quite sure whether to believe any of it, or where it's narrative was taking you (including some unpleasant areas of life). I guess I had hoped that the film might make some things clearer. However the film over-simplified the narrative, making it harder for the viewer to link the episodes, as well as robbing the characters of their motivations. One central episode of how the Jewish refugee, Elias, was betrayed and left to die by the protagonist's father (thereby originating the inherited curse) was merely told rather than shown. Perhaps the film's budget ran out? I have no complaint about the filming or acting.
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