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Tbilisi-Tbilisi (2005) Online

Tbilisi-Tbilisi (2005) Online
Original Title :
Tbilisi-Tbilisi
Genre :
Movie / Comedy / Drama
Year :
2005
Directror :
Levan Zakareishvili
Cast :
Giorgi Maskharashvili,Eka Nijaradze,Rusiko Kobiashvili
Writer :
Levan Zakareishvili
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 27min
Rating :
7.4/10
Tbilisi-Tbilisi (2005) Online

A young filmmaker named Dato has no money to make a movie, so he hangs out drinking and brooding all day in the capital of the former Soviet republic, Georgia. He is also writing a screenplay. Excerpts from his script, shot in black-and-white, are cut into his story. All the stories, including the framing story about Dato and his friends, are interwoven so that they become one long narrative about contemporary life in Georgia.
Credited cast:
Giorgi Maskharashvili Giorgi Maskharashvili - Dato
Eka Nijaradze Eka Nijaradze
Rusiko Kobiashvili Rusiko Kobiashvili
Kakha Kintsurashvili Kakha Kintsurashvili - Tedo
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Berta Khapava Berta Khapava
Dato Khurtsilava Dato Khurtsilava
Shota Kristesashvili Shota Kristesashvili - (as Shota Qristesashvili)
Baadur Tsuladze Baadur Tsuladze

Selected as the Georgian entry in the Best Foreign Language Film category for the 2006 Oscars.

Other festivals and awards:

  • "Nika"- Russian Film Academy Award 2006
  • Cannes IFF(Directors ' Fortnight) 2005
  • Black Sea IFF (Romania) Best Script Award 2005
  • Eurasia IFF (Kazakhstan,Almaty) Special Jury Award 2005
  • Best Directing Award, "An ELEPHANT"-special prize of the Guild of the Russian Film Critics Best Actor in a Supporting Role.- Festival of Cis Countries and Baltic States (KINOSHOCK) 2005
  • IFF of Cinema Mediterraneen(Montpellier,France)-Best Music Award 2005
  • "Golden Lily"-Grand Prize for the Best film (Wiesbuden,Germany) 2006
  • Best Film Award Ashdod IFF (Israel)2006 Best Directing Award -Ashdod IFF (Israel)2006
  • Best Film Award Best Directing Award -Ashdod IFF (Israel)2006
  • Festival of Cis Countries and Baltic States(KINOSHOCK) 2005 Best Directing Award "An ELEPHANT"-special prize of the Guild of the Russian Film Critics Best Actor in a Supporting Role


User reviews

Steel balls

Steel balls

Bleak, oppressive, and utterly without hope, this was Georgia's submission to the Academy last year for Best Foreign Film. The story, such as it is, concerns a filmmaker writing a script, which we see played out in black-and-white segments throughout the film, as he travels around the city meeting friends and crooked politicians and getting beaten by the police because he fits the profile of a drug addict. Every scene is more harrowing than the one that came before it. This film depicts a Tbilisi of thieves, rapists, and drug addicts with corruption at every level of authority, on its last leg with a dying past and an aborted future. As a film it's not perfect, but its only real problems are mere technical issues like dialogue sync. It's definitely a powerful statement -- I suppose the reason it hasn't been distributed anywhere is simply because it's just too bleak. The very end of the credits read, in large Roman letters, "S.O.S."
Thetalen

Thetalen

I saw this film at the 2006 Palm Springs International Film Festival. Levan Zaqareishvili is it's Tbilisi born and Tblisi resident Director/Writer/Producer and since it about a man who is writing a film you have to wonder if this may be a thinly veiled film based on Zaquareishvilli and some of his experiences. This film is slow paced and very dark and brooding but it keeps your attention. There are some interesting characters like the retired professor who is now a market vendor, the old woman selling sunflower seeds, the gang of delinquents and the alcoholic sister of the gang leader, the bully security guard, the marketplace drummer and the deaf vagrant and her little brother in this bleak look at the underbelly and harsh life of Tbilisi. Again you have to wonder if some of these character subjects are drawn from real life. Segments of the film that represent what the central character is writing for his movie are shot in black and white that gives it a dramatic and documentary style effect. I would give this a 7.0 out of scale of 10. It is a good film and I would recommend it.
Vital Beast

Vital Beast

Something very painful for me , for teenager now living in Tbilisi, great film about of dark times which withdrawed Georgia for decades, about absolute anarchy which made professors selling margarines, and the ministers transformed to salesmen. Even now here are lot's of families in city who's lives where destroyed by that times and have to be poor for many years, because they sold everything... Who can imagine what did the artists feel in these times, the professor gives his dissertation to saleswoman of sunilower, Why? because that time she needs it more, art lost meaning, everything became materialistic, poor robs poorer and no one cares about that. And someone with big fat stomach, crosses himself when hears of tragedy and then... then he sleeps calm ... Dark 90's of Georgia, of oligarchic state with all of it's brutality. Nothing romantic, without hope, Pure , Pessimist Georgian neorealism.

R.I.P Levan Zaqareishvili
Andromajurus

Andromajurus

I am Georgian myself (from Tbilisi,actually) and this is why it was so painful for me to watch this movie. I am almost certain that the screenwriter and most of the characters are "painted" from the real persons. After all, I have also witnessed beggars in the streets and workless artists. Of course, this is not a complete picture of Tbilisi,but since later is often pictured as sunny and beautiful, I appreciate the filmmaker's courage to show the ugly side of what's happening in his own back yard. Doubtless, technology needs more work;however,taking in mind the situation in my city(as depicted in this movie),I am thankful that its release was possible at all, even with bad film and most likely underpaid actors and that no matter how dark it is in the streets of Tbilisi,some filmmakers still make it.