{"id":3328,"date":"2025-12-21T10:20:41","date_gmt":"2025-12-21T10:20:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/gfr.ge\/?p=3328"},"modified":"2025-12-21T10:21:04","modified_gmt":"2025-12-21T10:21:04","slug":"%e1%83%90%e1%83%93%e1%83%90%e1%83%9b%e1%83%98%e1%83%90%e1%83%9c%e1%83%94%e1%83%91%e1%83%90%e1%83%93-%e1%83%a8%e1%83%94%e1%83%a3%e1%83%9b%e1%83%93%e1%83%92%e1%83%90%e1%83%a0%e1%83%98-%e1%83%90%e1%83%a0","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gfr.ge\/en\/%e1%83%90%e1%83%93%e1%83%90%e1%83%9b%e1%83%98%e1%83%90%e1%83%9c%e1%83%94%e1%83%91%e1%83%90%e1%83%93-%e1%83%a8%e1%83%94%e1%83%a3%e1%83%9b%e1%83%93%e1%83%92%e1%83%90%e1%83%a0%e1%83%98-%e1%83%90%e1%83%a0\/","title":{"rendered":"BEINGS THAT FAILED TO BECOME HUMANS"},"content":{"rendered":"<div data-elementor-type=\"wp-post\" data-elementor-id=\"3328\" class=\"elementor elementor-3328\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<section class=\"elementor-section elementor-top-section elementor-element elementor-element-224c084 elementor-section-boxed elementor-section-height-default elementor-section-height-default\" data-id=\"224c084\" data-element_type=\"section\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-container elementor-column-gap-default\">\n\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-column elementor-col-100 elementor-top-column elementor-element elementor-element-1f05fe2\" data-id=\"1f05fe2\" data-element_type=\"column\">\n\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-widget-wrap elementor-element-populated\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-526af00 elementor-widget elementor-widget-text-editor\" data-id=\"526af00\" data-element_type=\"widget\" data-widget_type=\"text-editor.default\">\n\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-widget-container\">\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Modern consumer society has not only deepened alienation in the 21st century but also given it new, almost imperceptible forms. This problem is historically old, however, alienation has become an organic part of everyday life against the background of technological progress and a life oriented towards consumption in today's life. A person is no longer just alone, he is systematically isolated. It is precisely the diagnosis of this spiritual crisis that has become one of the main missions of auteur cinema. Visconti, Bergman, Antonioni\u2026 After their films, talking about this topic either carries the risk of repetition or leaves the impression of excessive ambition. Especially when it comes to a debut.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Vakho Jajanidze's film, \u201cThe Real Beings\u201d (2025) is the director's first independent work although this is not his first attempt to understand the inner emptiness of man. His student film, \u201cExodus,\u201d dealt with the same problem \u2013 a spiritual crisis that has become the norm today. The film is set in Chiatura, a mining town \u2013 a space that carries within itself the code of social exhaustion and historical isolation. Two single women\u2019s daily routine, the environment familiar to the director and the silent social tension created the conditions for generalizing a private story.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">\u201cThe Real Beings\u201d was based on Teona Dolenjashvili\u2019s novel of the same name. Dolenjashvili describes tired, disappointed, in love and sometimes reckless people who are faced with a choice: between life and death, love and hate, repentance and oblivion.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Vakho Jajanidze\u2019s \u201creal beings\u201d are people who seem to exist fully \u2013 they work, communicate, create families \u2013 but behind this existence there is emptiness. Their relationships are instinctive, emotionally exhausted and only outwardly stable. This is existence in the mode of imitation of life.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">The plot is simple but the structure is multilayered. The director develops three storylines: in the form of the older generation \u2013 Lana, Nika, Keta and Tengiz; the stories of the children \u2013 Datuna and Bebe and the teenager Nia. One space is divided into two families and people are separated from each other as beings. Two symbols enter the narrative from the very beginning: the forest \u2013 a space where a person is left facing instincts, and the lake \u2013 the subconscious, silent desires and suppressed fears.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Lana and Keta are united by a common past, although this unity already exists only in memory. Returning to the same space forces them not to restore relationships but rather to re-experience the old emptiness. The first scene, shot in the dining room \u2013 from a long shot, with a static composition \u2013 shows an imitation of family cohabitation. The camera seems to be patiently observing the characters and recording not words but tension, suppressed aggression and that momentary desire that is more like polite communication than the beginning of a real relationship.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Betrayal has become a natural state for both couples: Nika is an unfaithful husband, Keta is an unfaithful wife. Their relationship is fueled not by passion but by an attempt to fill an inner void. This is an instinctive movement towards emptiness. The camera records a boat lost in the lake from above and the surface of the water covered with dumpsters becomes a visual metaphor for the characters\u2019 emotional state \u2013 feelings are divided, suppressed and alienated from each other.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">The children\u2019s line creates the most painful layer of the film. Datuna and Bebe are beings neglected by their family members. Bebe looks at the world with a direct, childish gaze \u2013 she seeks contact, tries to share her discoveries with others and does not know how to protect herself from emotional neglect. Datuna chooses aggression as a self-defense mechanism \u2013 aggression directed not only against others but against himself too.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Datuna\u2019s inner violence is transformed into the visual language of computer games. The camera captures the moment when the computer game character resembles the mother figure in the form of an aggressive fighter. This is the child\u2019s unconscious attempt to express the emotion that she cannot formulate in real life through the language of violence. The \u201cgame\u201d played on the lake shore, in the arbour, is also a continuation of this fantasy \u2013 an imaginary murder as an illusion of liberation.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Bebe seeks dialogue everywhere \u2013 with her mother, who politely dismisses her and with Datuna, whom she considers a friend, an equal. However, in both cases the answer is no. Bebe\u2019s childhood is a vulnerable space, where there is no escape from pain.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Nia\u2019s line is the weakest in the film. The character, who is at a critical age, seems to open up a potentially interesting direction but it remains only a rhythmic pause in the end \u2013 a movement that does not intensify the plot or add a new layer of the problem.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Tengiz is the only character who cannot coexist with this environment. He works, observes nature, captures it with a camera, as if trying to connect with the world from a distance. Leaving the camera turned on in the final scene and disappearing from the shot himself is intended to emotionally engage the viewer although this gesture remains more of a conceptual idea than real empathy.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Bebe tries to make contact again in the finale. A snail \u2013 a childish discovery, a symbol of vulnerability \u2013 is offered to Datuna as an emotional request to be protected although Datuna rejects this gesture as well. Bebe follows him to the lake and falls into a hidden hole in the water \u2013 as if finally sinking into his own inner world, where time stops and words lose their power. The child cannot get out of the water without others\u2019 help. The director stops the narrative right here \u2013 he does not give us a solution, he only shows us the result.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">Minimalism of dialogues, elongated shots and a slow rhythm. Visually, the aesthetics is refined but emotionally alienated. This \u201cordering\u201d and \u201cproblematics\u201d distance the viewer from the story. Slow cinema, as a form is not a problem in itself. The problem is that in this case, form comes before content.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">In \u201cThe Real Beings,\u201d the director\u2019s cinematic taste, knowledge, and cultural references are clearly felt. However, while watching the film, one often gets the feeling that you have seen these people, this space, and this environment somewhere before \u2013 with someone else, in another film.<\/p><p class=\"p1 translation-block\">The film shows a world where people are physically together, but emotionally very far from each other. It accurately captures the symptoms of alienation but it fails to generate empathy and\/or even aggression towards the characters. Thus, \u201cThe Real Beings\u201d is more of a diagnosis than a feeling, more of an observation than an unconventional, new understanding of the problem.<\/p><p class=\"p3\">Maya Levanidze<\/p>\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/section>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u10d7\u10d0\u10dc\u10d0\u10db\u10d4\u10d3\u10e0\u10dd\u10d5\u10d4 \u10d9\u10dd\u10dc\u10e1\u10e3\u10db\u10d4\u10e0\u10e3\u10da\u10db\u10d0 \u10e1\u10d0\u10d6\u10dd\u10d2\u10d0\u10d3\u10dd\u10d4\u10d1\u10d0\u10db XXI \u10e1\u10d0\u10e3\u10d9\u10e3\u10dc\u10d4\u10e8\u10d8 \u10d2\u10d0\u10e3\u10ea\u10ee\u10dd\u10d4\u10d1\u10d0 \u10d0\u10e0\u10d0 \u10db\u10ee\u10dd\u10da\u10dd\u10d3 \u10d2\u10d0\u10d0\u10e6\u10e0\u10db\u10d0\u10d5\u10d0, \u10d0\u10e0\u10d0\u10db\u10d4\u10d3 \u10db\u10d0\u10e1 \u10d0\u10ee\u10d0\u10da\u10d8, \u10d7\u10d8\u10d7\u10e5\u10db\u10d8\u10e1 \u10e8\u10d4\u10e3\u10db\u10e9\u10dc\u10d4\u10d5\u10d4\u10da\u10d8 \u10e4\u10dd\u10e0\u10db\u10d4\u10d1\u10d8 \u10db\u10d8\u10d0\u10dc\u10d8\u10ed\u10d0. \u10d4\u10e1 \u10de\u10e0\u10dd\u10d1\u10da\u10d4\u10db\u10d0 \u10d8\u10e1\u10e2\u10dd\u10e0\u10d8\u10e3\u10da\u10d0\u10d3 \u10eb\u10d5\u10d4\u10da\u10d8\u10d0, \u10d7\u10e3\u10db\u10ea\u10d0 \u10d3\u10e6\u10d4\u10d5\u10d0\u10dc\u10d3\u10d4\u10da \u10e7\u10dd\u10e4\u10d0\u10e8\u10d8 &#8211; \u10e2\u10d4\u10e5\u10dc\u10dd\u10da\u10dd\u10d2\u10d8\u10e3\u10e0\u10d8 \u10de\u10e0\u10dd\u10d2\u10e0\u10d4\u10e1\u10d8\u10e1\u10d0 \u10d3\u10d0 \u10db\u10dd\u10ee\u10db\u10d0\u10e0\u10d4\u10d1\u10d0\u10d6\u10d4 \u10dd\u10e0\u10d8\u10d4\u10dc\u10e2\u10d8\u10e0\u10d4\u10d1\u10e3\u10da\u10d8 \u10ea\u10ee\u10dd\u10d5\u10e0\u10d4\u10d1\u10d8\u10e1 \u10e4\u10dd\u10dc\u10d6\u10d4 &#8211; \u10d2\u10d0\u10e3\u10ea\u10ee\u10dd\u10d4\u10d1\u10d0 \u10e7\u10dd\u10d5\u10d4\u10da\u10d3\u10e6\u10d8\u10e3\u10e0\u10dd\u10d1\u10d8\u10e1 \u10dd\u10e0\u10d2\u10d0\u10dc\u10e3\u10da \u10dc\u10d0\u10ec\u10d8\u10da\u10d0\u10d3 \u10d8\u10e5\u10ea\u10d0. \u10d0\u10d3\u10d0\u10db\u10d8\u10d0\u10dc\u10d8 \u10d0\u10e6\u10d0\u10e0 \u10d0\u10e0\u10d8\u10e1 \u10db\u10ee\u10dd\u10da\u10dd\u10d3 \u10db\u10d0\u10e0\u10e2\u10dd, \u10d8\u10e1 \u10e1\u10d8\u10e1\u10e2\u10d4\u10db\u10e3\u10e0\u10d0\u10d3 \u10d8\u10d6\u10dd\u10da\u10d8\u10e0\u10d4\u10d1\u10e3\u10da\u10d8\u10d0. \u10e1\u10ec\u10dd\u10e0\u10d4\u10d3 \u10d0\u10db \u10e1\u10e3\u10da\u10d8\u10d4\u10e0\u10d8 \u10d9\u10e0\u10d8\u10d6\u10d8\u10e1\u10d8\u10e1 \u10d3\u10d8\u10d0\u10d2\u10dc\u10dd\u10e1\u10e2\u10d8\u10d9\u10d0 \u10d8\u10e5\u10ea\u10d0 \u10e1\u10d0\u10d0\u10d5\u10e2\u10dd\u10e0\u10dd \u10d9\u10d8\u10dc\u10dd\u10e1 \u10d4\u10e0\u10d7-\u10d4\u10e0\u10d7 \u10db\u10d7\u10d0\u10d5\u10d0\u10e0 [&hellip;]<\/p>","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":3329,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"site-sidebar-layout":"default","site-content-layout":"","ast-site-content-layout":"default","site-content-style":"default","site-sidebar-style":"default","ast-global-header-display":"","ast-banner-title-visibility":"","ast-main-header-display":"","ast-hfb-above-header-display":"","ast-hfb-below-header-display":"","ast-hfb-mobile-header-display":"","site-post-title":"","ast-breadcrumbs-content":"","ast-featured-img":"","footer-sml-layout":"","theme-transparent-header-meta":"","adv-header-id-meta":"","stick-header-meta":"","header-above-stick-meta":"","header-main-stick-meta":"","header-below-stick-meta":"","astra-migrate-meta-layouts":"set","ast-page-background-enabled":"default","ast-page-background-meta":{"desktop":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center 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