directed by Kote Mikaberidze

You truly need to see this film to understand why it’s such a magnificent production. Recently, the Klassiki team has shared several satire films from the USSR on their platform and I was invited to see them, which I gladly did. Today I’d like to recommend you “My Grandmother”, directed by a Georgian director, which was actually banned in the USSR for many years. How surprising! And you may soon get why. It’s about a man (Aleksandre Takaishvili), who’s a bureaucrat working at an office. From the very beginning we can see that it’s not an ordinary office when it comes to the visual part, but definitely typical when it comes to the atmosphere and work intensity. I’m sure you’re all very excited when you need to go any kind of office and try to get things done. First you need to find the right room, then find out the room is actually wrong, so you need to go to another one which turns up to be closed, so you go to someone else to ask for help, they send you to yet another room and you basically feel like Asterix during that one task of his (if you’re not sure what I’m talking about, I recommend seeing “The Twelve Tasks of Asterix”, 1976). Let’s be honest – bureaucracy looks exactly the same everywhere, so in each office there’s a bunch of people who have no idea what they’re doing and they’re so tired of that that taking breaks becomes their favourite activity. In today’s film we have this idea presented in a rather abstract way, but I’m sure you’ll relate to it anyway. Getting back to our protagonist – the man loses his job, so he has to find a way to get a new one. And at this moment we’re introduced to his wife (Bella Chernova), who’s a true icon of this film. The woman is so mad with her husband that she becomes a complete nightmare chasing him with pure anger in her eyes. If you needed some strong female character – here she is, you won’t be disappointed. In order to get back to work, the man is advised to get a letter of recommendation from a “grandmother”, because apparently that’s the only way. I had so much fun watching this production, because it is hilarious at numerous moments. However, what actually amazed me are all the techniques they managed to use there. I can tell it took a lot of creativity and a lot of work to make it, which is quite paradoxical considering what the story of the film is about. I couldn’t believe it was made in 1929! I really wish current film crews watched more of those old gems and got inspired to be more innovative. The camerawork, the unusual frames, the moving objects… all that made the film incredibly interesting. If I may – my favourite little moments are when the protagonist is cleaning his glasses (you’ll see why), and also when he talks to another man and puts his glasses on him (you’ll see what’s special about it). Those are those little things that matter to me, so if you’re also a meticulous cinephile, you will have so much fun!
My rating: 8/10
S.








