After years of distance, Artemis has to get back to Athens due to her father's frail state of health. Discovering her father's well-kept secret allows Artemis to understand her father, in a way she was not able before, therefore love him truly for the first time.
Critics Of "Moon, 66 Questions (Selini, 66 erotiseis)"
Caimán Cuadernos de Cine
November 17, 2021
A film that maintains the aesthetic and formal constants of new Greek cinema, its tonal roughness and its corners full of sharp edges, but that progressively abandons pain to culminate in a kind of catharsis and redemption. [Full review in Spanish]
Jacqueline Lentzou's intriguing, unconventional feature debut eschews anything as trite as a big emotional rapprochement, but it does ultimately carve out a shared emotional space for the pair.
Delicate and empathetic, Moon, 66 Questions is an impressive debut feature. Part coming-of-age, part illness narrative, the film is above all an intimate portrait of Artemis as she is forced to reevaluate her relationship with her father.
Lentzou has crafted a film that channels the ebbs and tides of physical movement and emotional trauma ... in order to let her two leads truly carry the weight.
A captivating and painful film about repressed trauma that explores miscommunication as a basis for understanding family relationships. [Full review in Spanish]
The tidal currents of Moon, 66 Questions gently pull us out into an ocean of captivating gaps, ellipses and silences, granting an enormously rich emotional rich experience for those willing to go with its flow.