The Beekeeper Angelopoulos
, 1986) is a landmark of European art-house cinema, starring Marcello Mastroianni in one of his most somber and acclaimed performances. As the second installment in Angelopoulos's "Trilogy of Silence," it explores themes of existential despair, the decay of personal and national identity, and the alienation of the individual in a changing Greece. Core Premise & Narrative The film follows
The film follows (played by Marcello Mastroianni), a middle-aged schoolteacher who abandons his career and family following his youngest daughter's wedding. Reverting to his family’s traditional trade, he embarks on a solitary journey across northern Greece to transport his beehives to flowering spring landscapes. Along the way, he picks up a young, rootless hitchhiker (Nadia Mourouzi), whose presence highlights his disconnect from a modern world he no longer recognizes. Their interaction culminates in an erotic but desperate encounter in an abandoned cinema, eventually leading to Spyros's tragic sacrifice at his own hives. Key Characters The Beekeeper's Melancholia: On Theo Angelopoulos's Style The Beekeeper Angelopoulos