Khibula (2018)

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Direction: George Ovashvili
Country: Georgia

The contemplative, poetic ways of Georgian helmer George Ovashvili remain intact in his third feature, Khibula, a political drama film inspired by the last days of the first democratically elected president of Georgia, Zviad Gamsakhurdia. Despite of this fact, the director rejected the term biopic since the name of the president in the film, played by Iranian actor Hossein Mahjoub (The Colors of Paradise, 1999), is deliberately unspecified to give the film a broader dimension.

We observe the painful rural journey of a demotivated, self-proclaimed president who returned to his devastated country after being overthrown by an authoritarian regime. Escorted by a few faithful supporters, he refuses to leave Georgia again, but is forced to hide from the enemy, visiting several houses while gradually losing hope in his cause. 

The sadness of his reality contrasts with the immense beauty of the images, impeccably captured by Italian cinematographer Enrico Lucidi (Baaria, 2009) in his first collaboration with the Georgian director. Visibly tormented with the decaying state of things, the president seems incapable of changing his fate. His death, whether by assassination or suicide, remains in mystery. 

Shot in 35mm, Khibula is not as strong as Ovashvili’s previous films - The Other Bank (2009) and Corn Island (2014) - whose backdrops were the 1992-1993 War in Abkhazia. However, this desolate tale of a political leader in steep decline can’t be ignored.

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