Ena Koritsi Gia Dyo
To outsmart his stern scholar brother to give him his blessing to finally get married, a frivolous slacker resorts to a bold but risky strategy; however, love is always unexpected. Can the wise tutor…
Ena Koritsi Gia Dyo
To outsmart his stern scholar brother to give him his blessing to finally get married, a frivolous slacker resorts to a bold but risky strategy; however, love is always unexpected. Can the wise tutor learn a thing or two about desire? Can two polar opposites live under the same roof? On one hand, there's Kimon, a stern old-school Philosophy scholar who is convinced that true love and a happy marriage don't exist, and on the other hand, there's the frivolous, party-animal slacker, Aristides, who only lives for today. Madly in love with his nightclub singer sweetheart, Mirto, the smitten Aristides will resort to a bold but risky strategy to outsmart his older brother to give him his blessing to finally get married; however, what both siblings fail to perceive, is that the omnipotent love is always unexpected. Can the wise tutor learn a thing or two about desire and devotion? —Nick Riganas
Ena Koritsi Gia Dyo
Comedy,Romance
Film Details
To outsmart his stern scholar brother to give him his blessing to finally get married, a frivolous slacker resorts to a bold but risky strategy; however, love is always unexpected. Can the wise tutor learn a thing or two about desire? Can two polar opposites live under the same roof? On one hand, there's Kimon, a stern old-school Philosophy scholar who is convinced that true love and a happy marriage don't exist, and on the other hand, there's the frivolous, party-animal slacker, Aristides, who only lives for today. Madly in love with his nightclub singer sweetheart, Mirto, the smitten Aristides will resort to a bold but risky strategy to outsmart his older brother to give him his blessing to finally get married; however, what both siblings fail to perceive, is that the omnipotent love is always unexpected.
Can the wise tutor learn a thing or two about desire and devotion? —Nick Riganas.