Jump to content

Michael Papas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from The Lifetaker)

Michael Papas
Papas in 2010.
Born
NationalityGreek-Cypriot and British
Occupation(s)Film director, producer, screenwriter
Years active1966–present
SpouseSusan Papas
Children1
Websitemichaelpapas.com

Michael Papas is a Greek-Cypriot independent filmmaker working in England and Cyprus. He is best known for writing, directing and producing The Private Right, The Lifetaker and Tomorrow's Warrior.

Career

[edit]

The Private Right (1966)

[edit]

In 1966, Papas made his feature film debut as producer, writer and director of the politically controversial, critically acclaimed The Private Right.[1][2][3][4] Set in Cyprus and London, it concerns a group of Cypriot guerrilla rebels engaged in the uprising against the British colonials. After being captured, a Cypriot guerrilla leader is tortured by a fellow Cypriot who is collaborating with the British army. Years later, the victim travels to London to seek revenge against his torturer.[1][5] The Private Right premiered at the 1966 London Film Festival[1] and opened at theatres in England in 1967. Papas withdrew the film from competition at the 1967 Sydney Film Festival because of cuts demanded by the Commonwealth Censor Board.[3]

The Sunday Times called the film "a striking debut."[6] Sight & Sound called it "astonishing for a first feature" and added, "Papas achieves a heraldic theatrical power."[1] The British Film Institute's Monthly Film Bulletin called Papas "a director eager to experiment with film form, and more important able to do it with authority."[7] The Times said Papas "manages his box of tricks with striking skill and control, and the image he presents of a weirdly unfamiliar nightmare London… is powerfully haunting."[8]

The Lifetaker (1975)

[edit]

Papas's 1975 English film The Lifetaker stars Terence Morgan as a deceived husband who engages his wife (Lea Dregorn) and her young lover (Peter Duncan) in a series of deadly games. It had its world premiere at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, where it was both lauded and criticised for its controversial themes of sex and violence and the corruption of youth.[9][10] According to Papas, the film was scheduled to be released across the UK, but the managing director of EMI distribution cancelled the release after viewing the completed film due to its controversial themes.[11]

In Offbeat, a 2012 collection on British cinema edited by Julian Upton, The Lifetaker is called a “stylish and erotically charged tale of obsession” that is “not only the quintessence of the kind of film they don’t make anymore, but is also radically unlike the kind of film they made even then.”[11] The film is praised for its “consistent use of inch-perfect composition, bold camera moves, sumptuous colour schemes and daring set pieces.”[11]

Tomorrow's Warrior (1981)

[edit]

Papas’s 1981 film Tomorrow’s Warrior, shot in the UK and Cyprus and also known by its Greek title Avrianos Polemistis, is based on true events from the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus and stars Christos Zannidis. The story concerns a young Cypriot boy and his family who flee their village in advance of a Turkish invasion, struggling to survive in a Greek refugee camp.[12] The Sunday Times called the initial invasion sequence a "stunning, mind-bending centre piece" that "has few equals anywhere in the cinema."[13] The New Statesman wrote that such sequences "portray man's reasonless inhumanity to man everywhere."[14]

Little Odysseus and the Cyclops (2011)

[edit]

In 2011, Papas returned with Little Odysseus and the Cyclops and Secret Paths, which were filmed one after the other. Little Odysseus and the Cyclops is a modern day retelling of a story from Homer's The Odyssey. The fantasy adventure film premiered at Papas's Acropole Cinemas in Nicosia.[15]

Personal life

[edit]

Papas was born in Nicosia, Cyprus.[16] His wife, Susan Papas, co-produced his later films with him.[2] Together they own and run the Acropole Cinemas in Nicosia, which they opened in 1995.[17] His son, Minos Papas, is a New York-based filmmaker[2] who was the director of photography on Little Odysseus and the Cyclops[15] and Secret Paths.

Filmography

[edit]
Year Title Credited as
1966 The Private Right Writer/director/producer
1972 Solitaire Director
1975 The Lifetaker Writer/director/producer
1981 Tomorrow's Warrior (aka Avrianos Polemistis) Writer/director/producer
2011 Little Odysseus and the Cyclops Writer/director/producer
2013 Secret Paths Writer/director/producer

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Michael Kustow, "Festivals 66: London," Sight & Sound, Winter 1966/67.
  2. ^ a b c Katerina Georgiou, “Filmmaker Minos Papas Debuts Shutterbug,” Neo, May 2010.
  3. ^ a b P. Mudie, Sydney Underground Movies: Ubu Films, 1965–1970, University of New South Wales Press, 1997, p. 70.
  4. ^ Margot S. Kernan, "The Private Right," Film Quarterly, Vol. 20, No. 4, Summer 1967, pp. 65–68.
  5. ^ Albert Johnson, “Films: The Private Right,” San Francisco Film Society. Accessed 2 June 2013.
  6. ^ Derek Prouse, "Scene one, take one, film one," The Sunday Times, 27 November 1966.
  7. ^ David Wilson, "The Private Right," Monthly Film Bulletin, April 1968.
  8. ^ "The Private Right," The Times, 23 November 1966.
  9. ^ "'The Lifetaker' Succeeds By Provocation," de Volkskrant, 1 March 1976.
  10. ^ Quentin Falk, Screen International, 14 November 1981, p. 13.
  11. ^ a b c Julian Upton, editor, Offbeat: British Cinema’s Curiosities, Obscurities and Forgotten Gems, Headpress, 2013, pp. 311–13.
  12. ^ Robert Firsching, “Avrianos Polemistis (1981),” New York Times. Accessed 2 June 2013.
  13. ^ Alan Brien, "Requiem to a nation," The Sunday Times, June 1982.
  14. ^ John Coleman, "Island Stories," New Statesman, 11 June 1982.
  15. ^ a b Marianna Kourti, “Cypriot Film Inspired by Greek Mythology,” Greek Reporter, 4 March 2011.
  16. ^ Michael Papas page, British Film Institute. Accessed 3 July 2013.
  17. ^ “Acropole Cinemas,” cyprusnet.com. Accessed 5 July 2013.
[edit]