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Inhabitants and surroundings of Georgia following the Revolution of the Roses, shown through a sixteen-year-old girl and a Domestic Intelligence agent who play themselves on the borderline of fiction and documentary.
Filmmaker Jan Willem van Dam made a film in Georgia, following the Revolution of the Roses in 2003, on the borderline of fiction and documentary. The film is based on 'the life and dreams' of Nini Sardlishvili, a sixteen-year-old Georgian girl. Nini tells about her life and dreams, speaks with two elderly women about past and future and walks among the ruins of a huge, burnt-out Soviet archive. She plays herself in the film, just like the other protagonist, Domestic Intelligence agent Gocha Ovashvili. He travels across the country in response to a remarkable appeal by a Georgian minister (appearing in a newscast), to ask people if they are criminals. During this futile and absurd quest, he meets mainly aged Georgians, including a shepherd and two monks, and admires the scenery, captured on video by Van Dam and his cameraman Hein van Liempd in careful compositions and precise frames.

Title: Als het licht zich anders tot de tijd verhoudt
Year: 2006
Duration : 1 hour, 45 minutes
Category: Feature film
Edition: NFF 2006

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