Georgian
director Dito Tsintsadze burst on to the international scene
in 1993 when his On The Edge was awarded a
Silver Leopard at the Locarno festival. This laconic tale,
set in Tbilisi on the verge of the Georgian civil war, records
in minute detail the psychological pressure that mounts
on a young man, an idle observer in a nearly abandoned city,
to maintain his independence despite the contradictions
of his stance. For by remaining neutral, he will eventually
lose contact with friends and surroundings, thus isolating
himself and leaving himself vulnerable. Unfortunately, On
The Edge had placed Tsintsadze in the front ranks
of Georgian film-makers at a time when production at the
Gruzia Studios had ground to a standstill. For the next
seven years, he was without work.
Born
in 1957 in Tbilisi, Tsintsadze studied at the Georgian
Institute For Film & Theatre (1975-81),
made a handful of short films and worked as an assistant
for other directors. His first two medium-length feature
films, however, marked him out as a director with a feel
for atmosphere and the foibles of human behaviour. Guests
(1991) is an absurd chronicle of a family receiving unexpected
visitors, in which no one is sure who the guests are in
the first place. In Home (1991), the focus
is on a young woman who lives in a milieu of apathy, plainness
and indifference. Both of these films served as études
for the written-and-directed auteur study of the vacillating
young man in On The Edge.
In
Lost Killers, a tragi-comedy shot in Mannheim
with financial backing by enterprising Berlin producer Peter
Rommel, Tsintsadze has his cameraman (Benedict Neuenfels)
follow a pair of hapless,
fumbling hitmen around the city as they stalk their prey.
Branko (Misel Maticevic) and Merab (Lasha Bakradze) don't
know why they are to rub out their unsuspecting businessman
target, nor even how to find him in the first place. Each
time a ripe opportunity presents itself, something absurd
and coincidental stymies the pair. So these lost killers
enlist Carlos (Elie James Blezes), a mammoth illegal Haitian
fugitive, and his friend Lan (Nicole Seelig), a pint-sized
Vietnamese prostitute, to help get the job done and
end up
with
an unexpected and unexplained murder on their hands. Watch
out for Tsintsadze himself in a cameo role.
Ron
Holloway
i
|
| Cast
|
Nicole
Seelig, Misel Maticevic, Lasha Bakradze, Elie James Blezes,
Franca Kastein Ferreira Alves, Franz Koller, Michael Holz,
Dito Tsintsadze, Athanasios "Sake" Cosmadakis, Victor
Benzler |
| Scr |
Dito
Tsintsadze |
| Prod |
Peter
Rommel |
| Prod
co |
Home
Run Pictures, Peter Rommel Productions (Germany), ARTE/ZDF |
| Run
Time |
100 mn |
| Int'l
Sales |
World
Sales |
|
|