SCREENING KAPODISTRIAS
To depict Ioannis
Kapodistrias cinematically is to confront one of the most difficult
figures in modern Greek history. Kapodistrias does not lend himself naturally
to heroic simplification. Unlike the romantic insurgent, the charismatic
demagogue, or the revolutionary martyr fashioned easily into myth, he belongs
to the colder world of diplomacy, administration, restraint, and political
severity. His tragedy unfolded less upon the battlefield than within the
contradictions of state formation itself: the attempt to impose institutional
order upon a society emerging from revolution, regionalism, civil conflict, and
economic devastation. The recent film Kapodistrias, directed by Yannis Smaragdis, approaches this immense
subject with unmistakable reverence, though reverence proves precisely its
greatest limitation. Like much contemporary Greek historical cinema, the film
confuses commemoration with interpretation and symbolic affirmation with dramatic
truth.
From its opening sequences, the film announces
its devotional intentions. Kapodistrias emerges framed through mournful
lighting, solemn orchestral accompaniment, and ceremonially composed imagery
that continually elevates him above ordinary political humanity. The camera
contemplates him as an icon rather than investigates him as a historical
personality.
This constitutes the film’s central failure
because the historical figure requires no embellishment. Kapodistrias already
possesses the contradictions necessary for profound drama. Born into the
aristocratic society of Venetian Corfu, educated within the intellectual
currents of Enlightenment Europe, rising through diplomacy to become Foreign
Minister of the Russian Empire and one of the most influential statesmen in
Europe, helping shape Swiss neutrality while simultaneously aligning himself
with the conservative post Napoleonic order, abandoning imperial prestige in
order to govern a shattered revolutionary state, and ultimately being
assassinated outside the church of Saint Spyridon in Nauplio by political
enemies produced partly through his own methods of governance, his biography
contains within itself the architecture of tragedy. The assassination itself is
presented almost liturgically, as though constituting the original sin of the
modern Greek state, the primordial national crime from which subsequent
dysfunction, division, and instability flow. Yet the film never seriously
interrogates whether this interpretation possesses historical validity or
merely reflects a retrospective mythology requiring martyrdom in order to
explain the failures of the Greek polity.
The screenplay also reproduces a remarkable
number of nationalist exaggerations and historical distortions. Kapodistrias’
role in Swiss affairs and European diplomacy is inflated into near
civilisational authorship, while his complicated relationship with
revolutionary movements is softened into uncomplicated patriotic fervour
despite his deep suspicion of conspiratorial nationalism and political
insurrection. The cumulative effect is to transform a formidable diplomat and
administrator into a quasi messianic figure upon whom the fate of nineteenth
century Europe mysteriously appears to depend.
The real Kapodistrias was neither liberal
visionary nor uncomplicated nationalist redeemer. His political outlook was
profoundly shaped by the bureaucratic and hierarchical culture of European
empires. While toying with liberal ideas, he ultimately came to distrust
representative politics, feared factionalism, and regarded strong central
authority as indispensable for national survival. During his years in Russian
service, he opposed revolutionary upheaval across Europe and participated in
the diplomatic structures established after the Congress of Vienna, structures
explicitly designed to suppress political instability and revolutionary
nationalism. These experiences formed the basis of his political philosophy
upon arriving in Greece in 1828.
The film’s portrayal of Klemens von Metternich is especially revealing
of its simplistic historical imagination. Metternich appears almost as a stock
reactionary villain, the embodiment of repression opposing the righteous
aspirations of Kapodistrias and Greek independence. Such treatment reduces one
of the nineteenth century’s most sophisticated political minds into caricature.
Historically, Metternich’s hostility toward revolutionary nationalism emerged
from a determination to preserve the post Napoleonic European balance and
prevent the destabilisation of multinational empires such as Austria. More
importantly, the film entirely fails to recognise the uncomfortable extent to
which Kapodistrias himself belonged to the same conservative diplomatic universe
as Metternich. Both men emerged from the post Vienna order, distrusting
revolutionary volatility and mass politics, believing in elite administration,
political restraint, and disciplined state structures. The irony, which the
film entirely misses, lies in the fact that Metternich recognised something
essential about Kapodistrias that the film itself refuses to acknowledge: he
was not an outsider to the conservative European order but one of its most
capable practitioners.
The same simplification governs the film’s
treatment of Kapodistrias’ rule within Greece itself. Kapodistrias appears
primarily as a morally pure reformer opposed by selfish regional elites and
foreign intrigues. Yet historically, the hostility directed toward him arose
not merely from corruption or provincialism but from genuine fears regarding
the concentration of authority. His inclusion of his brothers in government,
dissolution of representative institutions, censorship of political opposition,
imprisonment of regional figures such as Petrobey
Mavromichalis, and relentless centralisation of administrative power
generated intense resentment across substantial sections of Greek society.
These actions emerged directly from his political philosophy.
The screenplay proves equally careless in its
treatment of the political actors surrounding him. Revolutionary figures shaped
by regional loyalties and competing visions for the Greek state are flattened
into crude moral categories. The Maniots in particular appear less as
autonomous political actors defending entrenched local authority than as
irrational obstacles placed before Kapodistrias’ enlightened state building
project.
What the film neglects most strikingly is perhaps
the most modern dimension of Kapodistrias’ experience: his condition as an
apodimos, a Greek abroad whose relationship with the homeland was shaped by
distance, imagination, and sacrifice. Here the film possessed the possibility
of genuine interpretive originality and entirely failed to recognise it.
Kapodistrias belonged to a type that would later become deeply familiar
throughout the Greek diaspora: the expatriate who abandons privilege and
advancement abroad in order to regenerate an imagined homeland, only to
discover himself regarded as an outsider by those he considers his own people.
The deepest tragedy lies in the fact that
Kapodistrias himself appears never fully to have understood the nature of this
estrangement. He remained convinced that patriotic sincerity, administrative
competence, and personal sacrifice would ultimately reconcile him with the
society he sought to govern. In this respect, his downfall possesses the
structure of classical tragedy: a man destroyed partly through blindness to the
historical and cultural realities surrounding him. Had the film possessed the
interpretive courage to pursue this dimension of his life, it might have
transcended patriotic hagiography entirely. Kapodistrias would then appear not
merely as the murdered founder of the Greek state, but as the archetype of a
recurring diasporic fate: the belief that devotion to the homeland guarantees
belonging, when it may instead culminate in permanent estrangement from it.
The film appears deeply unwilling to confront the
possibility that the founder of the Greek state may simultaneously have
embodied authoritarian instincts fundamentally hostile to political pluralism.
Instead, conflict is moralised into a binary opposition between enlightened
patriotism and primitive obstruction. The complexities of post revolutionary
Greece disappear beneath symbolic certainties. Kapodistrias remains permanently
correct, his opponents permanently diminished.
This inability to sustain ambiguity reflects a
wider pathology within modern Greek historical culture itself. Greek public
discourse repeatedly collapses into moral binaries incapable of accommodating
contradiction. Historical personalities become saints or traitors, visionaries
or destroyers, patriots or collaborators. Intermediate positions generate
discomfort because they destabilise the emotional certainties through which
collective identity is organised. One is expected to stand wholly with Eleftherios Venizelos or wholly against him,
wholly with Byzantium or wholly with the Enlightenment, wholly nationalist or
wholly cosmopolitan.
The film seems anxious that acknowledging
Kapodistrias’ political rigidity, suspicion of constitutionalism, or deeply
paternal conception of governance might somehow diminish his patriotism. In
reality, these qualities constituted the foundation of his historical
significance. The tragedy of his life lies precisely in the fact that the same
severity that enabled him to construct institutions also isolated him
politically and contributed to his destruction.
Such tensions might have yielded genuinely
profound cinema. Instead, the film retreats into solemnity and symbolic
posture. As in much contemporary Greek heritage cinema, stillness masquerades
as seriousness while reverence displaces psychological inquiry. The camera
venerates where it ought to interrogate.
This problem extends beyond narrative into
performance itself. Much of the acting throughout the film possesses the rigid
declamatory quality characteristic of nationalist theatre, school
commemorations, and state anniversary pageantry. Dialogue is delivered with
immense rhetorical gravity though rarely with emotional spontaneity. One senses
actors performing historical significance rather than inhabiting political
personalities shaped by fear, exhaustion, pride, calculation, and ideological
conflict.
The treatment of Kapodistrias’ relationship with Roxandra Sturdza exemplifies this weakness
especially clearly. Historically, their bond appears to have been marked by
emotional restraint and renunciation. The film instead renders it through the
language of decorative romantic melancholy, reducing a psychologically complex
relationship into sentimental accompaniment for the hero’s suffering.
Scenes unfold with ceremonial stiffness, as
though trapped beneath the burden of their own symbolic importance. Grief
appears choreographed. Anger emerges as theatrical emphasis rather than
psychological eruption. Even moments intended to convey intimacy possess an
oddly embalmed quality, leaving the viewer with the impression of observing a
commemorative tableau rather than living human beings caught within historical
catastrophe.
Yet the problem ultimately lies less with the
actors themselves than with the film’s broader conception of history.
Characters function primarily as embodiments of patriotism, sacrifice,
treachery, or loyalty rather than psychologically unstable individuals shaped
by contradiction and inner conflict.
In this respect, the film exemplifies a broader
crisis within Greek historical filmmaking. Since the decline of the New Greek
Cinema with its political experimentation, ambiguity, and formal daring, much
contemporary Greek historical cinema has retreated into heritage spectacle and
commemorative piety. Historical figures become monuments to be maintained. To
reimagine them critically appears almost profane.
The irony is that the film diminishes
Kapodistrias through excessive admiration. The historical figure who emerges
from diplomatic correspondence, memoirs, and biographies is far more formidable
than the cinematic version. Contemporary observers frequently described him as
austere, suspicious, emotionally distant, and incapable of compromise. Spyridon Trikoupis remarked upon his distrust of
independent political actors and his excessive concentration of authority. He
inspired admiration precisely because he possessed immense force of
personality, though he also generated fear and resentment for the same reason.
The film largely evacuates these tensions.
Political conflict becomes reassurance rather than inquiry. This perhaps
explains the divide between critical and popular reception. Critics have
objected to the film’s hagiographic simplifications, while audiences have
embraced its patriotic sincerity and emotional certainty.
Ultimately, Kapodistrias exposes a deeper
exhaustion within Greek cinematic representation itself. Greece remains a
culture profoundly attached to its historical inheritance though frequently
hesitant to interpret it creatively. Historical cinema consequently becomes
trapped between pedagogy and paralysis, unable fully to dramatise the figures
it claims to honour because genuine dramatisation would require accepting
contradiction within a national self image that brooks no such introspection.
The film, unable to endure ambiguity, transforms
Kapodistrias into a monolith, though ironically statues of the founding father
remain relatively few across the modern Greek landscape itself. In doing so, it
reduces a deeply complex historical figure into an object of reverence, leaving
the viewer confronting not the tragedy of Kapodistrias himself, but the
continuing inability of Greek historical culture to imagine its past outside
the confines of moral absolutism, diasporic insecurity, and ceremonial memory.
DEAN KALIMNIOU
kalymnios@hotmail.com
First published in NKEE on Saturday 23 May 2026

