Georgian — Film

Tonight, he was showing The Wishing Tree by Tengiz Abuladze. It was a pastoral poem of pre-Soviet Georgia—a village of wine, feasts, and fierce pride. Irakli loaded the reel with trembling hands. The generator outside coughed, and the screen flickered to life.

He had been a boy in 1957 when he first fell in love—not with a girl, but with a woman’s face on a strip of celluloid. That face belonged to Nato Vachnadze, the silent-film star of The Eliso . In that film, a Georgian woman’s grief had moved mountains. Irakli decided then that Georgian cinema was not mere entertainment. It was memory. It was resistance. georgian film

When the lights came up—weak, flickering oil lamps—no one left. They sat in silence, still under the spell of the Georgian image. The soldier wiped his face. The old woman folded her photograph. A child asked, “Will we have our own film one day?” Tonight, he was showing The Wishing Tree by Tengiz Abuladze

Irakli did not stop the projector. He stood in his booth, tears streaming down his face, whispering the film’s final line along with the characters: “You can burn the vines, but the wine remembers.” The generator outside coughed, and the screen flickered

The film breathed. Wine flowed. Men swore oaths. A priest blessed a harvest. And in the audience, for two hours, the war did not exist.

Irakli descended from the booth. He knelt beside the child and said, “Child, we are a film. A long, painful, beautiful one. And as long as one projector turns, we are not finished.”