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  • Big fat Greek wedding ship

    The Courier Mail (Queensland, Australia)
    October 8, 2005 Saturday

    Big fat Greek wedding ship


    BRIDES (PG)
    ***

    A POPULAR choice as opening-night film at this month's Greek Film
    Festival, Pantelis Voulgariss's drama -- his first international
    production -- is sure to resonate with mainstream moviegoers simply
    looking for a well-acted, well-told adult story.

    A box-office hit in veteran Voulgariss's native Greece, the project
    attracted Italian-American maestro Martin Scorsese as executive
    producer.

    Scorsese's personal links to America's immigrant experience no doubt
    provided reminders of the Greek experience portrayed here.

    While Voulgariss isn't particularly effective at suggesting the
    ship's movements for the scenes that provide the bulk of the
    locations, interest is held by the human drama being played out on
    the S.S. King Alexander in the 1920s.

    The ship is carrying 700 passengers -- young women from Greece,
    Turkey, Russia and Armenia -- bound for America and arranged marriage
    to strangers.

    Perhaps looking to broaden the appeal of a story that could have been
    treated in documentary fashion, Voulgariss has opted to focus on a
    romance that develops between an American photographer, Norman Harris
    (Irish actor Damian Lewis) and one of the intended brides, Niki
    (Victoria Haralabidou).

    She's a dressmaker from Samothrace who is bound for Chicago to fulfil
    a marriage contract a younger sister has broken because of
    home-sickness.

    There's suspense as the King Alexander gets closer to New York. Will
    Niki fulfil her heart's desire and accept Norman's marriage proposal,
    or will she stay true to her family honour and go ahead with the
    planned marriage?

    More could have been made of the taxing conditions in third class
    where the bulk of the women travelled.

    It's left to veteran British actor-director Steven Berkoff to provide
    the film's dramatic element as a nasty Russian marriage broker
    Karaboulat not beyond trading the innocent young women as sex slaves
    during the voyage.

    Most of the performances are above-average, with Dimitris Katalifos
    as the ship's captain whose mind-set is getting his passengers to New
    York with a minimum of fuss, and Andrea Ferreol as a colourful madam
    who makes the voyage livelier than the brides, who are kept pretty
    much in the background.
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