Despite its interesting low-res look, Alexandre Koberidze’s mystifying film is needlessly contrivedGeorgian film-maker Alexandre Koberidze appeared to revive the spirit of the French New Wave with his previous film Wh...
See moreDespite its interesting low-res look, Alexandre Koberidze’s mystifying film is needlessly contrived
Georgian film-maker Alexandre Koberidze appeared to revive the spirit of the French New Wave with his previous film What Do We See When We Look at the Sky? – an unhurried, meandering and garrulous movie with its own cheeky sort of low-tech magic realism as it followed its nose around the city of Kutaisi. His new film is a mystifying three-hour road movie, shot (as was his debut film Let the Summer Never Come Again) on low-res video, like that of an obsolete cameraphone. It is even more challenging and I have to admit it defeated me, despite some intriguing qualities, including a dry touch of comedy.
A middle-aged man called Irakli (David Koberidze) receives a letter addressed to him and his wife, Nino (Irina Chelidze), from their twentysomething photographer daughter Lisa, announcing that she wishes to disappear from their lives. A police officer tells them that Lisa is an adult who can do what she likes. But an oddly emotionless Irakli sets out to track her down anyway, even though another more conventionally plausible movie would have found room for a conversation about the cost of a private detective. Lisa was photographing football fields when she vanished, so Irakli’s plan is just to drive around the country’s football fields, asking people nearby if they’ve seen her. The result is many desultory conversations with people who are apparently nonprofessional actors.
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Despite its interesting low-res look, Alexandre Koberidze’s mystifying film is needlessly contrivedGeorgian film-maker Alexandre Koberidze appeared to revive the spirit of the French New Wave with his previous film Wh...
See more