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- The series examines the impact of the ancient Greek thinkers on western civilization today.
- Joanna Lumley explores the culture and history of Greece.
- 15 dramatized biographies/studies of the prose writers and poets of the Generation of the '30s, the landmark generation of modern Greek culture, narrating the historical events of the period which inevitably affected both the authors and their works.
- 'The Code of Art'' is a documentary series created by Simos Manganis and produced by Green Olive Films for COSMOTE History that explores the unknown story of 75 iconic Greek sculptures, paintings and pottery. As part of the series, well-known Greek and foreign archaeologists, art historians, artists and researchers, as well as heads of museums and cultural organizations, take us on guided tours of museums, galleries and archaeological sites around the country.
- Dimitris Pistiolas, a retired employee for the Greek Post Office, is the owner of the largest cinema museum in the world. In two tiny venues in Athens lies his renowned by the Guinness World Records collection. Now, 90 years old, Dimitris recounts his past, hidden in his machines, hoping that his memories are not going to be lost forever.
- From lush green forests to snow-capped mountains, from towering cliffs to bare sandbars, Greece is a land of a natural beauty rivaled only by its historic relevance. It has seen Europe's earliest civilizations, its philosophical founders and its decisive battles. Spectacular aerial images of this unique part of Europe show scenic bays, breath-taking mountains, wild river deltas, picturesque villages and monasteries. The landscapes we see are allowed to breathe and tell their stories. Everyday stories of the people on the ground, who live and work here, create a balance to the bird's eye view and invite the audience to experience the most authentic of Greek culture. Fishermen, monks, sculptors - ordinary people living in exceptional places - give original insights into historical buildings, sacred places, ancient traditions and culinary traditions, which have affected Europe for centuries.
- The fictionalized life story of the most distinguished politician and diplomat, who left an indelible mark on the history of modern Greece, unfolds through a series of re-enactments of the actual events that led to his assassination. Significant aspects of his personal story, valid historical narratives, rare documents, and excerpts from autobiographical texts written by Kapodistrias himself, come into life, in an attempt to bring today's viewers closer to the unknown sides of his personality and the foundations of the New Greek State.
- Eros in Ancient Greece. Born out of chaos.The power that permeated daily Greek life. A documentary and an inquiry into the deity of sexual love. Eros, the joyful companion of Aphrodite, a divine figure around which poets, sculptors and philosophers constructed a physiology and a philosophy of desire. A documentary that builds on art, sky, universe, poetry, drama in understanding ancient Greek homo- and heterosexual customs and practices. Via visual and textual erotica, philosophical and astronomical approaches to eros, dances and travels to the Greek islands, the documentary present us with the most vivid God, the Greek God of Love. We learn philosophical approaches. We play the flute and we dance. We look at the stars. We remember mythical symbolisms of love. We hear from archaeologists, poets, actors, scientists not just to remember the past, but also to explore the impact of Eros on our present.
- During the Great War at the Macedonian front (Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey) catalytic events took place and faded into obscurity. Each one shaped the progress of the Great War and changed the tides of history forever. Tales of boldness and courage were recorded as legends among the first aviators of the warring parties . It is no coincidence that veterans that became adept in flying over the Greek skies and the theater of operations over the Aegean, were later called to back up the efforts of science in order to reach and expand the limits of technology and human physiology even further. Aerial reconnaissance and observations, bombardments, "dog-fighting" and anti-naval warfare were few of the different roles that the competing aviators had to manage at the Macedonian front. Fearless men, strangers - taken from the ends of the world, from one side: British, French, Australians, New Zealanders, Canadians, Serbs and Greeks, and on the other side: Germans, Turks, Bulgarians, Austro-Hungarians. They conquered the fear of the unknown - defying death, they flew with primitive flying machines made of cloth and wood. They fought over the skies of Macedonia and the Aegean. Some of them never to return home.