Rightly nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film at the
87th Academy Awards - narrowly loosing out to the brilliant Polish
movie Ida (2013)
- Tangerines (2013) is a
Estonian-Georgian anti-war film written and directed by the Georgian film
director and screenwriter Zaza Urushadze.
The Estonian settlements in the Caucasus go back more than
100 years. With the outbreak of the bloody conflict between Georgia and the
Russian supported Abkhazia in 1992 ethnic Estonians were forced to return to
their ancestral homeland in Northern Europe. With very few people staying
behind their villages became ghost towns. Urushadze’s movie focuses on two
Estonian immigrant farmers who have decided to remain in Georgia long enough to
harvest their tangerine crop. When the fighting arrives at their doorsteps, Ivo
(played by legendary Estonian actor Lembit Ulfsak) along with friend Margus
(Elmo NĂ¼ganen), treat two wounded soldiers from opposite sides, Ahmed (Giorgi
Nakhashidze) and Niko (Mikheil Meskhi). During their extended period of
convalescence under the administration of Ivo, they are forced not only to
confront the reasons that fuel their hatred for each other, but also the
conflict that rages around them.
....as well as hardened fighters. |
Thanks to the totally believable acting from the complete
cast and the cinematography of Rein Kotov we get some inkling about the
realities of living in a war zone, which unfortunately many of the worlds
population are finding out. A situation that’s not going to improve with the
UK’s politicians voting to bomb countries, a decision that will inevitably
course more innocent civilian deaths, more misery and more refugees leaving the
conflict zones. Will we never understand that war never has a victor; yes it
makes certain people richer but makes humanity generally far poorer. The movie
goes along way to prove my point regarding the meaning of how to be human and
behave compassionately. It’s this type of film that makes statement cinema
worthwhile, and strangely left me with a warm feeling, perhaps my faith in
humanity had gone up a point or two, but that wont last!
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