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Il Cinema Ritrovato On Tour: My Grandmother

Il Cinema Ritrovato On Tour: My Grandmother

Il Cinema Ritrovato On Tour: My Grandmother

Dir. Kote Mikaberidze
61 min

Il Cinema Ritrovato on Tour • Presented by Archives on Screen

Chemi bebia (My Grandmother)

Introduction by Michal Kobialka

Sunday, February 16 • 7:30pm • Tickets: $12 General (+ $2 online fee), $8 Members (no fee), $8 Students (door)

ABOUT THE FILM

A work of brilliant socialist realism, My Grandmother presents a staunch critique of the inner workings of the Soviet government, a depiction that captures the mundane experience of contemporary office work. In the film, the protagonist, a lazy pen-pusher, gets the sack for his bureaucratic idleness, and learns that the way back into the job market depends on getting a letter of recommendation from a "grandmother."

Il Cinema Ritrovato Program Notes

I have seen my share of weird and incredible films, but My Grandmother (Chemi bebia) ranks among the craziest that I have ever seen. Let’s state at the outset that the film has nothing to do with grandmothers. It is a satire on bureaucracy that makes all other satires look tame. The expression "my grandmother" seems to mean a referee, patron, or protector needed to get back on track when the protagonist is fired from his office.

No holds are barred in Kote Mikaberidze’s savage attack on bureaucracy. There are affinities with the Dada, the wildest masters of early film farce (Cretinetti), early Eisenstein (Strike), and the FEKS school of Soviet cinema. Mikaberidze’s film is a firework display of visual technique. There are urban montages, distorted visions, object-animation sequences, slow-motion passages, and extreme close-ups. The entire film is geared to extreme states of consciousness. One of the wittiest and most original inventions is towards the end when the characters in a chase sequence transform into their own shadows.

A dystopian vision of an open-space office is a recurrent feature in classic films exposing the alienation of the modern workspace. We remember The Crowd by King Vidor, The Apartment by Billy Wilder and The Trial by Orson Welles. Mikaberidze beats them all with his vision of the bureaucratic workspace. This incredible work is a must-see for all people interested in films that transcend the limits of conventional narrative. –Antti Alanen

In Georgian director Kote Mikaberidze’s hilarious no-holds-barred satire, a hopelessly lazy paper-pusher tries to get his job back to avoid the wrath of his wife, by looking for a "grandmother" – an influential bureaucrat who can provide a recommendation letter. For the worker, the quest turns into a labyrinthine excursion through the thickest red tape; the audience is thrust into a gloriously entertaining, frenetic 60 minutes, crammed with wildly imaginative visuals, camera tricks, special effects and stop-motion animation. Banned for nearly 50 years, Chemi bebia remains one of the most delightfully irreverent and peculiar comedies of the silent era. The exuberant Finnish musical ensemble Cleaning Women, whose work includes scores for the films Aelita, Metropolis and Alice Rohrwacher’s Oscar-nominated short Le pupille, bring their selfmade instruments – crafted from mangled household items and repurposed trash. –Mara Fortes

Film Details

Program: Il Cinema Ritrovato On Tour
Release Year: 1929
Runtime: 61 min
Country/Region: USSR

Cast/Crew

Director: Kote Mikaberidze
Cinematographer: Anton Polikevich
Screenwriter: Giorgi Mdivani, Kote Mikaberidze
Principal Cast: Aleksandre Takaishvili (the bureaucrat), Bella Chernova (the bureaucrat's wife), Evgeniy Ovanov (the porter), Akaki Khorava (the worker)

Sponsor for Il Cinema Ritrovato On Tour: My Grandmother

Showtimes

The Main 3

Sunday, February 16th