: Tsimitselis and Kazaz represent the younger generation of both nations. Their interactions cut through the political posturing and aggressive rhetoric of their respective governments, showing that regular citizens often share the same desires, anxieties, and humor.
: The second half of the movie gets bogged down by the sheer volume of characters and subplots running simultaneously, making the central narrative feel a bit scattered. 🏆 Final Verdict Yannis Tsimitselis (Greek) Tugce Kazaz (Turkish)
plays Havva, a Turkish woman caught in the middle of the escalating border fiasco. ⭐ The Performance & Chemistry : Tsimitselis and Kazaz represent the younger generation
: The film brilliantly mocks how local media on both sides take a minor, accidental border crossover and spin it into a massive, jingoistic international crisis. 🏆 Final Verdict plays Havva, a Turkish woman
remains a classic in modern Greek commercial cinema. It succeeds because it uses actors like Tsimitselis and Kazaz not to highlight division, but to showcase shared humanity through laughter. It is a raucous, slightly dated, but deeply warm-hearted look at how easily borders can be dissolved by a little bit of common sense and a lot of humor.