Vancouver Greek Film Festival review: 01 offers insider's view of a brilliant century in arts
At The Cinematheque, Nanos Valaoritis’s memories of a long life in poetry are like a museum you never want to leave

Nanos Valaoritis in Dimitris Mouzakitis’s 01.
The Cinematheque presents 01 as part of the Vancouver Greek Film Festival on March 26 and 31. The festival runs March 13 to April 2
THERE’S SOMETHING SO gloriously claustrophobic about 01, in which we spend 100 minutes in the company of Greek poet Nanos Valaoritis.
Released in 2024, it’s the most recent of the seven features screening at The Cinematheque’s fourth annual Vancouver Greek Film Festival—other titles include 1957’s perennial Boy on a Dolphin starring Sophia Loren, Elia Kazan’s On the Waterfront, and the Theo Angelopolous masterpiece The Travelling Players—but 01 gives us a sprawling, insider’s view of 20th-century arts and letters, almost entirely from inside a cramped and dusty Athens apartment.
Valaoritis spent his life moving between London, Paris, and San Francisco, strolling into historic scenes as he avoided Nazi occupation and Greece’s own military junta. He collected friends like Andre Breton, Picasso, William Burroughs, the Beats, the Yippies, producing his own poetry and publishing underground journals and literary reviews that the 98-year-old, seen here in the last year of his life, frequently describes as “punk”.
As such, we hear personal recollections and ever-so-slightly gossipy remarks on the likes of Francis Bacon and Lucien Freud, who was “a bit of a sadist”. We hear Gregory Corso described as “the worst, a brat, envious and competitive…but a good poet”. He most admires Burroughs and the French artist Francis Picabia, who marginalized themselves but also prevailed out of stubborn independence.
We also see Valaoritis attending an exhibition of his own art in an Athens gallery, a stooped but elfin old man possibly unrecognized by the patrons around him. Later, he’ll recall that Marcel Duchamp scoffed at his work, braying that it was “faux naïf”. His early nude line drawings are in fact very charming, but Valaoritis takes it on the chin, shrugging that he’s just a writer who also paints.
More broadly, he’s a man at the end of a lifelong creative bender, seemingly pulled by mystical force into extraordinary and successive artistic communities. In a film that never loses its hold on the viewer—Valaoritis’s memory is like a museum you never want to leave, same goes for the apartment—it’s the film’s attention to his wife and soul-partner, the great American surrealist Marie Wilson, that perhaps stands out the most, partly because her work is so breathtaking, maybe even supernaturally driven. (He thinks so.)
But it’s also because this little-known and constitutionally modest genius (“her ego was non-existent”) was every bit the equal of their star-studded friends. The great Greek poet Valaoritis is still madly in awe of this woman.
Adrian Mack writes about popular culture from his impregnable compound on Salt Spring Island.
Related Articles
Copresented with Visions Ouest, new comedy mixes unvarnished look at alcoholism with desert adventure
Created by Vancouver’s Shana Myara, docuseries available for streaming on OUTtv.com highlights racialized and queer comedians
Filmmaker Mahdi Fleifel’s compelling portrait of two Palestinian refugees trying to escape hardscrabble limbo in an unrecognizable Athens
In Virginia Tangvald’s haunting new NFB documentary, she unravels the mysteries of a father and brother who lost their lives to the oceans that called them
At VIFF Centre, Petra Costa’s compelling new documentary ties the rise of right-wing politician Jair Bolsonaro into the boom in Christian fundamentalism
Titles in store span Green Snake on opening night and a special co-presentation of Once Upon a Time in China II with the Chinese Canadian Museum
Five short films take on deeper meaning against a backdrop of armed conflict and women’s rights struggles
With highlights such as “Space Oddity” and “Moonage Daydream”, the 1970s documentary about one of David Bowie’s greatest shows lights up The Polygon Gallery’s series of starlight screenings
Jules Arita Koostachin’s feature, set in the 1930s, centres a young pregnant woman who discovers she is of Cree ancestry
Put away your degraded VHS dub and celebrate: the 1977 story of dying, drug-addled Montreal counterculture soon screens at the Cinematheque
Film gives a front-row view of complex fight to protect old-growth forests, in largest act of disobedience in Canadian history
At the 15th annual event, here are six titles festival director Duncan Carr calls “a full experience in the briefest amount of time”
In new film at Vancouver Short Film Festival, the well-known influencer and stylist digs movingly into what it means to raise a teen girl these days
Lyana Patrick’s NFB documentary, recounting the Stellat’en and Saik’uz Nations’ ongoing fight for justice, returns for local screenings
Series includes all 13 of the French director’s films, including A Man Escaped, Pickpocket, Au hasard Balthazar, and more
Julie Rubio’s extensive new documentary, making its local debut at the VIFF Centre, reveals a trailblazing woman who was an outsider on several counts
HATCH, Clementine, One Day This Kid, and Beyond the Salish are among the 47 Canadian shorts screening this year
In the retrospective Secret Laws of the Cinematograph, the enigmatic French director’s hugely influential career comes into intense focus
Saints and Warriors, #skoden, and Sudan, Remember Us are among the titles that secured wins
Moonlight, Tehran: City of Love, and more explore themes of loneliness, belonging, and desire in program curated by Fay Nass
Ahead of a special live-scored screening, the renowned photographer and director reflects on “liminal spaces” and gore-filled supernatural encounters