I didn't work in Greece again until into the... in the '90s. When in 1993 I got a sudden phone call from somebody speaking on behalf of Dimopoulos saying, 'Dimopoulos is making this new film and would you be interested'. I said 'Yes, I'd be very interested, I'd be delighted, in fact'. So I came and we made a film called The Little Dolphins, which is a film with four children as... four 10-year-olds, 11-year-olds as the main protagonists. And it was made in the west of Greece near Argos, sorry, near Arta on a bay called the Amvrakikou Colpo, so the film is called... in English it's called The Little Dolphins, but in Greek it's called Ta Delphinakia tou Amvrakikou, being the dolphins of this little bay.
And, again, it was made very efficiently, very quickly and for very little money. But, by the time that film was made, there was no longer an audience for it. So it got a big hand in Salonica at the festival. It didn't get a prize, except a special prize that was given to the children, which they created especially for the occasion. But festival prizes I shall talk about at some other, at some other point, because it's always a lot of political nonsense going on. But it had a big success in Salonica. It had the biggest... I was there for the whole festival, I saw nearly every movie that was shown that year, that was in '93. And, it got the biggest round of applause of any movie. But then it didn't take any money, because it's a family film and families don't go to the cinema anymore. It's really tragic. It's such a shame because it's a nice film. Now, unfortunately, in... last year or the year before, Dimopoulos died, so that was a great shame, very sad. In fact, in the last few years a lot of people have died. But I suppose one has to expect that when you get to my age.