Competition
Dir. Levan Tutberidze
You must be a football fan
to understand how the protagonist, a 38-year-old writer Zaza, managed to
make a large scoop. Otherwise his exclamations about sir Alex Fergusson
and Jose Alvalade, who owns a stadium in Lisbon, will be gibberish to
the viewer. Even more so because Zaza uses it in everyday life. He
welcomes the women going to the funeral with the words: “Ah, Sicilian
weepers! Let me introduce myself. Gaetano Donizetti! Gaetano, very
pleased!” Yes, Zaza won at the football pools, so don’t imagine anything
about underground lotteries in Tbilisi. As for the money for the bet,
it was borrowed from an old drug dealer, whose fridge will be the
convergence point for all the paths in this tangled story with a strong
criminal taste a la Guy Ritchie. Having clarified the point about the
football pools it would be noble to let the viewer get the pleasure of
puzzling out the rest.
We would like to focus on how the
filmmakers use the wide screen, which was rare in Georgian cinema even
in Soviet times (only Abuladze’z “The Entreaty” comes to mind), while
for the cinema of the independent Georgia this is downright
extraordinary. When in some country filmmakers start using the wide
screen, it means the cinema of this country has gained sufficient
momentum. But the pretty dilapidated Tbilisi of the present day is not a
very good setting for the wide screen and the director Tutberidze found
a witty and probably the only possible way out, using glamorous foreign
visual quotations as pieces of the puzzle. They are of such diverse
origin, that one can’t help being amazed at the director’s knowledge of
cinema. Perhaps that is the origin of the line of dialogue in the movie,
which expresses a very sane idea: “When you watch something alone, you
become wiser”. For example when during a pause in the rehearsal one of
the characters, a ballerina, records Zaza’s favourite song “Can’t Take
My Eyes Off Of You” on his cell-phone at his request, she walks across
the stage under the flashlights of different colors, which cast colorful
patches of light around her silhouette, and comes to a stop under a
box, decorated with stucco mouldings and gilt like a temple. This is a
direct quotation from the wide-screen musical “Corps-de-ballet” (the
item called “Nothing”) which Tutberidze must have surely seen in Soviet
cinemas at the time of his own film debut “Nazare’s Last Prayer”. Then
characters who do not know each other, enter one and the same house,
ring the doorbell, receive no answer and leave, walking further down the
street. The camera pans on the first person from the roof, then up
again, letting the first depart and the second approach during the same
shot, and then pans down again. This is a quotation from the newest
cinema. Gaspar Noé for example used this technique to record the
wanderings of his characters, including the departing soul, through
Tokyo in “Enter the Void”. Tutberidze, the author of the Georgian
box-office hit “Trip to Karabakh” could have seen the film in Cannes,
for example.
But even more interesting than the use of the new
scale, unfamiliar not only to himself, but to the country, was one
daring, indecent and, by consequence, immediately alluring association.
Having sex with a prostitute in the sauna the gangster Mamuka almost at
the moment of orgasm looks at his groin and remembers that the automatic
gun which was used to shoot his friend to death today, had a red
handle, bent like a banana (there is an immediate cross-cut to the
automatic gun, which is currently store in the fridge). When the
director’s logic can baffle you to that extent, it is worthwhile to say
after the screening that while we were all having a good time, somewhere
out there in the world cinema a great original was born!
Alexey Vasiliev
29-06-2011
I’ll Die Without You/ Ushenod mgoni movkvdebi
Published in
Festivals