GENERATION P screening at FOMO Cinema Tbilisi

Sunday 3. May at 21:00 - 22:52

FOMO Secret Cinema, Tbilisi

IMPORTANT: GENERATION P will be starting at 21:00 - half an hour later than the advertised time (20:30) on Instagram.

Victor Ginzburg | 2011 | Russia | 1h52m | Presented in the original Russian audio with English subtitles

GENERATION P is one of the essential films about what happened to Russia in the 90s once ideology was replaced with mass media, mass consumerism, and the invisible hand of the market.

Adapted from Victor Pelevin’s 1999 novel, it follows Vavilen Tatarsky, a failed poet who drifts into copywriting in the wild commercial chaos of the 1990s and finds himself rising through a new world built on slogans, hallucination and manufactured desire. The plot gives the film its engine, but the real subject is the remaking of consciousness itself. Pelevin’s novel was one of the key satirical texts of the post-Soviet period, and Ginzburg’s adaptation keeps that core intact: the sense that politics, commerce and mass fantasy have fused into a single system of spectacle.

Pelevin’s prose has always proved difficult to translate to screen, as it's dense with parody, mysticism, philosophical digression and grotesque media logic, but Ginzburg seems to understand that the material does not need taming so much as committing to. The result is a film that leans into the novel’s excess rather than toning them down. Vladimir Epifantsev gives Tatarsky the right mix of bewilderment, opportunism and spiritual vacancy, and the film surrounds him with gangsters, ad men, pop-cultural debris and synthetic myth until modern Russia starts to look like a televised trance.

What makes GENERATION P really stand out for me is how it understands popular culture as a form of power. Advertising doesn't sit at the edges of the story. It becomes the language through which reality itself is rewritten. Pelevin was writing at the moment when post-Soviet consumer culture was taking hold, and later commentary on his work has noted how uncannily it anticipated the political spectacle and moral vacuity of the Russia we see today. Ginzburg’s film catches that insight and turns it into something gaudy, funny, drugged and genuinely unsettling. Few literary adaptations from modern Russia feel this alive to the corruption of image culture, and few films about advertising understand so well that selling products is only the beginning.


LOCATION: FOMO Secret Cinema, Bazari Orbeliani, Tbilisi. A five minute walk from Liberty Square metro.

HOW TO FIND FOMO: Enter Bazari Orbeliani via Atoneli St above Carrefour and take the stairs on your left to the first floor. You can also check our Instagram story highlights for a video showing exactly how to find us:
https://www.instagram.com/stories/highlights/17933106294029235/

FOMO Secret Cinema Bazari Orbeliani, 0105 Tbilisi, Georgia

Google Map of Bazari Orbeliani, 0105 Tbilisi, Georgia

FOMO Cinema

+995591100216

fomocinematbilisi@gmail.com

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