Konstantinos Giannaris (Sydney, 1959) is a Greek film director.
Born in Sydney. He studied economics, history and philosophy at Keele and Birmingham Universities in Britain. His film career began in England, where he completed short, low-budget independent films. He was involved in the 1982 experimental English documentary The Revenge of the Teenage Perverts in which gay teenagers ask English heterosexuals about their views on homosexuality. His first Greek film, A Place in the Sun in 1995, won the Best Greek Film Award at the Drama Short Film Festival. It was followed in the same year by the film Close to Paradise and in 1998 by the film From the Edge of the City, which won the second prize for Best Film of the Ministry of Culture. In 2001 he filmed Dekapentaugustos and in 2004 Homer. His films have been screened at many international film festivals and forums. His first feature film Near Paradise was financed and shot in London. Today he works and lives in Athens. He has openly declared that he is homosexual and an atheist.
Directing
37
Male
1959-01-01
Sydney, Australia
Konstantinos Giannaris, Κωνσταντίνος Γιάνναρης
Without
Framed Youth: The Revenge of the Teenage Perverts
One Day in August
Visions of Europe
3 Steps to Heaven
Hostage
From the Edge of the City
North of Vortex
Caught Looking
A Place in the Sun
Spring Awakening
Trojans
Jean Genet Is Dead
Jimmy Somerville: The Video Collection 1984/1990 (Featuring Bronski Beat and The Communards)
Disco's Revenge
Greeks (Greek Love and Sapphic Sophistication)
A Matter of Life and Death
A Desperate Vitality: The Films by Pier Paolo Pasolini
Travelogue
Man at Sea
Constantine Giannaris: The Short Films