Animal movie storyline. Under the hot Greek sun, animators at an all-inclusive island resort prepare for the busy tourist season. Kalia is the group leader. Paper decorations, glossy costumes and dance shows fill the stage. As summer intensifies and the work pressure builds up, their nights become violent and Kalia’s struggle is revealed in the darkness. But when the spotlights turn on again, the show must go on.
Animal is a Greek drama film written and directed by Sofia Exarchou. It stars Dimitra Vlagopoulou, Flomaria Papadaki, Ahilleas Hariskos, Voodoo Jurgens, Chronis Barbarian, Kristof Lamp, Nontas Damopoulos, Ilias Hatzigeorgiou and Elpida Orfanidou. The film premiered on August 3, 2023 at the 76th Locarno Film Festival, where it competed for the Golden Leopard.
Animal is a production of the Athens-based company Homemade Films, with co-production handled by Nabis Filmgroup (Austria), Digital Cube (Romania), Felony (Cyprus), Ars OOD (Bulgaria) and ERT S.A. (Greece). The film music was composed by the Austrian Wolfgang Frisch. The soundtrack album with a total of 17 pieces of music was released as a download by the Plaza Mayor Company in mid-January 2024.
About the Film
Ah, the holidays. Lounging by the pool, tanning on the beach, a little too much alcohol, a little too much partying. But while you are having a great time there are people slaving away to make sure it stays that way. The tourism industry in southern Europe each year attracts thousands of young people looking for work, and many of them land a summer job in an animation team at a resort or hotel.
While the dances may seem silly and the activities boring, a lot of them expect fun and adventure. But how much fun is it if you have to do it day in and day out, when energy and smiles are expected no matter how you feel? Alcohol, sex, and sun are a dangerous combination when you are having fun, but too much can be addictive.
As the tourist season is starting, a motley crew of animators of a luxury beach resort on one of Greece’s islands are trickling in. Among them Eva (Flomaria Papadaki), almost 18 and originally from Poland. The team is led by Kalia (Dimitra Vlagopoulou), a veteran at twice the age of Eva, who mothers over the shy girl perhaps because she recognizes something in her. The resort is for the early night, when sunburnt and overweight men get a chance at a close dance with a young and attractive woman while their wives are looking on amused
After midnight some of the animators moonlight in the local clubs aimed at a younger crowd, essentially doing the same work but with more alcohol and skimpier clothes. Nights drenched in alcohol, on occasion ending in casual sex on a beach; it sounds like fun when you are young, but when you have reached Kalia’s age and you are still there, you are stuck in a rut. No wonder she raids the schnapps bottles whenever she can. With Eva around, Kalia reflects on her life and realizes it is at a dead end.
Greek director Sofia Exarchou’s sophomore film Animal intends to show a darker side of the tourism industry, the daily grind of keeping other people happy to the detriment of your own happiness. She does this through the character of Kalia, who came to the island and never left, and now wonders if, at 35, she has thrown her life away. But there is no time for sadness, no time for reflection, the show must go on.
As a portrait of a woman whose life has rushed by her while she wasn’t paying attention Animal is excellent, in no small part because of Vlagopoulou’s tough-yet-vulnerable performance. Once Kalia’s realization creeps in that this is her life, Vlagopoulou goes from strength to strength, and when her loneliness becomes palpable as she does her karaoke version of Baccara’s Yes Sir, I Can Boogie in a bar where she knows nobody, ending with “I’m done. It’s over,” you see that sentiment etched in her eyes.
As a broader comment on the industry and our role as tourists in it, Animal is definitely a weaker, well, animal. The character of Eva and her relationship with Kalia seems promising, but ultimately never comes alive and only works in driving home the point that the industry is cyclic in the film’s final scene.
The film becomes inert and repetitive for a good chunk of the second act, and while this is perhaps part of the point, the audience doesn’t necessarily have to live the experience to get it. Handsomely shot as a sultry version of a Dardennes film, Animal works best when it focuses on its protagonist’s withheld misery. Exarchou’s follow-up to her well-travelled debut Park is a solid effort that bites off more than it can chew, but is held together by a beautifully sad central performance.
Animal (2024)
Directed by: Sofia Exarchou
Starring: Dimitra Vlagopoulou, Flomaria Papadaki, Ahilleas Hariskos, Voodoo Jurgens, Chronis Barbarian, Kristof Lamp, Nontas Damopoulos, Ilias Hatzigeorgiou, Elpida Orfanidou
Screenplay by: Sofia Exarchou
Production Design by: Jorien Sont
Cinematography by: Monica Lenczewska
Film Editing by: Dragos Apetri
Costume Design by: Vassilia Rozana
Art Direction by: Marilena Kalaitzantonaki
Music by: Wolfgang Frisch
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: Filmgarten (Austria), Shellac Distribution (France), Weird Wave (Greece)
Release Date: February 8, 2024 (Greece)
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