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Ekathimerini

An Austrian documentarist asks how Greeks are faring

By Lina Giannarou

«Unemployment, poverty, riots, bankruptcy: In the eyes of Europeans, Greece is collapsing. But, what it real life like out there, in the olive groves, on the islands and in the tavernas, in Spring 2012?” In early April, the award-winning Austrian author and filmmaker Fabian Eder set off on a journey in a yacht to answer this question and to explore the emotional and mental impact of five years of recession on ordinary Greeks today. “How are they faring with the crisis? What do the reforms means for them? What happened to good old Greece?” If these are the questions in the trailer for “Greece in Bloom,” who wouldn’t want to learn the answers in the film? “Greece in Bloom” is already well under way, as Eder — together with photography director Richard Wagner and photographer Andreas Handl — set off from Hania in Crete in early April and made his way to Ios in the Cyclades, to Monemvasia and to Pyrgos in the Peloponnese, and then to the Ionian island of Zakynthos and Ithaca, narrating his experiences along the way. His journey will end in Messolonghi in western Greece. The objective of “Greece in Bloom” is to put the material Eder gathers on his journey together into a 50-minute documentary for Austrian television, in order to depict a “timely portrait of Greece, in contrast to the miserable daily economic reports, which shock us and frighten us — because hate is a very short distance away from fear.” The idea for “Greece in Bloom” came quite unexpectedly as Eder was having breakfast with his actress wife Katharina Stemberger. Their conversation was revolving around the subject of how unfair the criticism against Greece could be in the Austrian and other European press. “The Greeks need to be given a voice, here and now,” said Eder, and the idea was born. While filming, Eder and his small crew are also keeping a blog (griechenlandblueht.wordpress.com), featuring photographs and comments of their experiences. In Mani, they wrote about Stefanos, a 26-year-old policeman they found playing traditional music on his guitar. “When I was still posted in Athens, a 19-year-old Pakistani man asked me to arrest him even though he had done nothing wrong, simply so he could get something to eat,” Stefanos said. “Someone who reaches the point of stealing because of hunger cannot be considered a thief.” On Easter Sunday on April 15, Eder and his crew were in Daimonia in Laconia in the Peloponnese. “These are people with hearts of gold, who work hard and live in one of the most beautiful places. People whose eyes sparkled with smiles until not so long ago. People of irresistible beauty, who are so different from the front-page stories… And there we were, three strange foreign from the North, sitting in the middle, as though we always belonged there. True hospitality, the true spirit of Christianity,” they wrote in their blog. Greeks are not defined by the crisis, according to the Austrian documentary makers. New terms other that debt haircut and gross domestic product need to become re-associated with crisis-hit country. Its culture, hospitality and Mediterranean lifestyle, even the departure of winter, they say, are pointing to the exit from the crisis. “Sailing in Greece reveals a country that is worth exploring, a country that, in contrast to the daily media reports about it, emanates hope.” Through the blog, “Greece is Bloom” is already gaining popularity as hundreds of visitors from all over the world log in every day to read the crew’s comments. “People need perspectives, ideals and a view of beauty. Where else, but in the cradle of our civilization, the foundation of our culture and our values, could we find these?,” Eder says in his online introduction to “Greece in Bloom.”

ekathimerini.com , Sunday April 29, 2012 (21:29)

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Austrian Director Shoots Documentary Film ‘Greece in Bloom’

By Stella Tsolakidou on May 2, 2012

“Unemployment, poverty, unrest, default. In the eyes of the Europeans, Greece is collapsing. But what is life really like out in the olive groves, on the islands and taverns during the Spring of 2012?” All throughout April, awardwinning Austrian author and director Fabian Eder, along with DPs and photographers Richard Wagner and Andreas Handl, travelled from Crete to Western Greece to answer this question and create a current, multimedia portrait of a country that has been crippled by the economic crisis and received numerous negative reports by international media. “Greece in Bloom” is a project that aims to break down stereotypes and prejudice formed lately against Greece and its people. The initial idea was born out of the blue, while Eder and his wife, Katharina Stemberger, were having their breakfast. Their discussion revolved around the unfair mourning over Greece’s fate and the social alienation of its people due to unfavorable media reports. “Greece in Bloom contributes to the way out of a crisis, which naturally – and luckily – concerns all of us, all European citizens. Greece and its population…that is more than an economic crisis. Values other than gross national product and the cutting of debts need to be focused on for a perspective to arise for finding a way out of the dilemma.” Shooting began early in April and was set to be finished by early May. The 50 minute-long feature film will be ready by the end of the month, and will present Greece to the Austrian public in a completely different light from the one that reduced tourist arrivals from Austria by 50 percent. The Austrian team was interested in capturing everyday life of the Greek people away from politics. Besides shooting, Eder and his partners kept their online blog griechenlandblueht.com

The Greek Reporter – europe