If you loved Ulysses' Gaze, try The Travelling Players
A bridge between a film you've already seen and one most people haven't. Here's what they share, and what the second one does that the first one doesn't.
What they share
Both films are directed by Theo Angelopoulos, and they both carry the cerebral, slow burn mood tags, and they sit in Drama / History / War territory. If that's the register that drew you to Ulysses' Gaze, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
What The Travelling Players is
You board a touring theatre company in 1939 Greece staging the same play across changing borders. Then politics seep into rehearsals and bullets replace applause. The director watches his company fracture against the march of decades. Angelopoulos frames history drifting through ordinary scenes until the troupe itself becomes a vanishing nation.

