Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueRestless teenagers try to find a way to break free from poverty and decide to rob a wealthy man. All of them get busted, and the nightmare begins.Restless teenagers try to find a way to break free from poverty and decide to rob a wealthy man. All of them get busted, and the nightmare begins.Restless teenagers try to find a way to break free from poverty and decide to rob a wealthy man. All of them get busted, and the nightmare begins.
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Where do I start?The opening sequence with Ganotis singing the ''decayed bolt'',the sequences with God played terrificly by Tsahiridis,the wiseguy Manesis speaks.A total era in front of your eyes.pure 80S cult!Don't miss it.
Plot: 3 teenagers led by the "leading" forth one decide to rob a wealthy man. They get caught and end up in a corrupt prison for minors.
You'll love Fylakes Anilikon if: You like realistic, dark Prison-dramas that don't actually choose sides and have a bit of comedic value too. The Greek cult cinema of the 80's is notorious for showing the negative sides of Greece, (and society in general), as they are and not how more mainstream movies want us to think. This movie succeeds in doing so and like I've said without actually choosing sides. Even the 4 teenagers who are a lot better than the hooligans in the streets or the corrupted prison wardens are criminals after all and the movie doesn't force you to see them as the "good guys". Fylakes Anilikon focuses on the problems of the prison but also show us the problems of a society with economic problems, where money and violence is power, it shows us the parents indifference or bad behavior towards their children, the corruption of the wardens, (exceptionally great acting from Tsahiridis as the "God"), the homosexual I-will-break-you-because-I-need-you chief warden and of course the typical corrupt Prison's head honcho, (Artemis Matsas of course!).
You'll hate Fylakes Anilikon if: You don't like the direction. 80's cult cinema even in its greatest hits always had a problem with bad acting, ridiculous montage, direction or cinematography. Fylakes Anilkon doesn't really have any of these problems but it does have the typical, very slow pacing of the era, taking a long time to get to the point. Finally if you expect something else from what the movie offers you'll be disappointed. This ain't no fairytale, there is no truly happy ending, things don't fix, they get worse
FINAL VERDICT: Good, Realistic Prison-Drama (7.4/10)
[+] Shows multiple sides of a corrupted society. Great performances. A little bit of decent comedy thrown in.
[-] Slow paced
Also Check: Apo Tin Akri Tis Polis (1998) – Panikos Sta Sholeia (1981) – Ta Tsakalia (1981) –Trainspotting (1996) - Xich Lo (1995)
P.S.: My purpose in all my IMDb Reviews is not to say "I like\don't like this movie" but to help you decide whether YOU will like it or not since everything is all about taste and expectations IMO...
You'll love Fylakes Anilikon if: You like realistic, dark Prison-dramas that don't actually choose sides and have a bit of comedic value too. The Greek cult cinema of the 80's is notorious for showing the negative sides of Greece, (and society in general), as they are and not how more mainstream movies want us to think. This movie succeeds in doing so and like I've said without actually choosing sides. Even the 4 teenagers who are a lot better than the hooligans in the streets or the corrupted prison wardens are criminals after all and the movie doesn't force you to see them as the "good guys". Fylakes Anilikon focuses on the problems of the prison but also show us the problems of a society with economic problems, where money and violence is power, it shows us the parents indifference or bad behavior towards their children, the corruption of the wardens, (exceptionally great acting from Tsahiridis as the "God"), the homosexual I-will-break-you-because-I-need-you chief warden and of course the typical corrupt Prison's head honcho, (Artemis Matsas of course!).
You'll hate Fylakes Anilikon if: You don't like the direction. 80's cult cinema even in its greatest hits always had a problem with bad acting, ridiculous montage, direction or cinematography. Fylakes Anilkon doesn't really have any of these problems but it does have the typical, very slow pacing of the era, taking a long time to get to the point. Finally if you expect something else from what the movie offers you'll be disappointed. This ain't no fairytale, there is no truly happy ending, things don't fix, they get worse
FINAL VERDICT: Good, Realistic Prison-Drama (7.4/10)
[+] Shows multiple sides of a corrupted society. Great performances. A little bit of decent comedy thrown in.
[-] Slow paced
Also Check: Apo Tin Akri Tis Polis (1998) – Panikos Sta Sholeia (1981) – Ta Tsakalia (1981) –Trainspotting (1996) - Xich Lo (1995)
P.S.: My purpose in all my IMDb Reviews is not to say "I like\don't like this movie" but to help you decide whether YOU will like it or not since everything is all about taste and expectations IMO...
This film will be appreciated after 100 years. The director and the actors (especially Manesis) is 200 years beyond their time.
This film had the guts to tell the story of the unseen part of the jail. It's a punch to the system.
This film had the guts to tell the story of the unseen part of the jail. It's a punch to the system.
Fylakes Anilikon is a very good film which shows the way of living in greek society in 80's where stealing seemed to be the only way of going away from poverty and salary from hard work. A company of 4 funny guys who are at least 30 years old (but play the teenagers in the movie) with motorcycles, after some failed attempts to gain money without working, they decide to rob a briefcase full of money... Nothing else, then the best part of the movie is in the prison of teenagers where the movie becomes drama and the guardian (Tsahiridis) in a great interpretation is the MVP of the movie even if Manesis (the boy with the mustache) plays veeery good. In depth, the movie wanna show that in that kind of society, the prison instead of being a way to become a better person, the more you stay inside, the more you become criminal and drug addict...
"I am going to destroy you. And I am going to destroy you because I am attracted to you". Such dialogue (between the prison warden and a young inmate, in this case) is not uncommon in the Greek cinema masterpiece "Fylakes anilikon". In a nutshell, this movie manages to sum up the entire 80's Greek youth culture in a mere 90 minutes of printed film. It depicts the story of a team, going from restless youngsters to prison convicts. Having decided that crime is the only way out of their problematic dead-end life they begin to plan a simple robbery. However, the plan goes wrong, they get caught and finally end up in juvenile prison. While there, the movie truly takes off. The team, apparently, do not have a good time. They are confined to a cell, they are sharing their room with other convicts, their families feel pretty bad about the situation and the prison staff are being mean to them. Plus, they have to deal with the warden's homosexuality and his fondness of young inmates. It's a real bummer for the team and it just goes to show that being in jail is bad, quite a surprising plot twist there. All is not lost however as the movie is not completely devoid of meaningful social messages and exquisite acting. Watch as the relatives cry outside the prison when being separated from their loved ones (some of them in the background are laughing their teeth out). Artistic challenges never cease to exist in the script and the director handles them masterfully. For example, the feeling of prison isolation is unique (most of the movie has been filmed in no more than three indoor locations). The casting is superb. The supervisor of the prison is played by Artemis Matsas, one of the sneakiest looking people (ever). "Theos" ("God") (Nikos Tsachiridis), one of the prison staff, is so mean looking and convincing you'd think he really worked at some correctional institution (or been an inmate in one). Themis Manessis, a Greek actor/cult figure is a 50 year old man, having an extremely large mustache. That doesn't stop him playing the role of a young team member, supposedly a schoolboy at the age of 18-19. This is classic stuff, not just comic relief. Manesis is an integral part of the film mechanics: At no point can you tell whether you are watching a tear-inducing drama or some sort of twisted comedy, written by a genius. All the scenes are a weird inconclusive mix of retarded individual outbursts and over dramatized meaningless problems. Most of the time you simply can't help but burst out in unstoppable laughter until your stomach begins to hurt. Concluding, no one should miss this movie. If you live outside Greece, plan your next holiday there. When you go, try to find the VHS tape. If you can't find it, stay in Greece until it shows up on TV. At some point it will show up. Stay, even if you have to wait forever. Even until you take your final breath. Some things are worth dying for.
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- AnecdotesThe movie sold 122,742 tickets. It came in 12th out of 48 movies.
- Citations
Prisoner: One day you will pay for this!
God: In another world you scumbag!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Fylakes anilikon No 2: Ekdikisi sti via (1984)
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- How long is Juvenile Prison?Alimenté par Alexa
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