THE DESERT OF THE TARTARS: In Memoriam Film Week at FOMO Cinema Tbilisi

Sunday 14. June at 20:15 - 22:55

FOMO Secret Cinema, Tbilisi

This week I'm celebrating actors, directors, editors and artists who are no longer with us, but whose work continues to shape the films we watch and love. Some became icons. Others worked quietly behind the camera. Together, they helped make cinema what it is today.

I'm showing THE DESERT OF THE TARTARS in tribute to Jacques Perrin and Jean-Louis Trintignant, both of whom passed recently in 2022.


Valerio Zurlini | 1976 | Italy, France, West Germany, Iran | 2h27m + 10 minute intermission | Presented in the original Italian audio with English subtitles

THE DESERT OF THE TARTARS is one of those films that leaves me asking the same question every time I watch it: Why isn't this movie more famous?

Look at the cast. Jacques Perrin. Jean-Louis Trintignant. Vittorio Gassman. Max von Sydow. Philippe Noiret. Fernando Rey. If you assembled that lineup today people would assume it was impossible. Yet somehow this remarkable film still feels like a secret.

The story follows a young officer named Giovanni Drogo who is assigned to a remote frontier fortress at the edge of an empire. He arrives expecting to stay briefly before moving on to something more exciting. Instead, he finds himself drawn into the peculiar routines of the fort and the men who occupy it.

What I enjoy most about the film is that almost nothing about it feels rushed. Modern cinema is often terrified of stillness. THE DESERT OF THE TARTARS embraces it. People sit. Observe. Wait. Look out across the horizon. Conversations drift. Days pass. Years pass. Yet somehow the film never feels slow in the way people usually mean when they say a film is slow. I found myself becoming more absorbed with every scene.

Part of that comes from how astonishing the film looks. It was shot at the ancient citadel of Bam in Iran, one of the most extraordinary locations I've ever seen captured on film. The fortress dominates every frame. It's beautiful, intimidating, and strangely hypnotic. There were moments where I found myself paying as much attention to the walls, corridors, and landscapes as the actors themselves.

I couldn't think of a better way to close this festival. Not because it's sad. Not because it's philosophical. Simply because it feels like the kind of film that reminds me why I fell in love with cinema in the first place. It creates a world, invites you inside and then leaves you changed by the time the credits roll.


FOOD AND DRINK POLICY: FOMO Cinema Lounge Bar opens 1 hour before the first screening of the day and closes at 02:00,.serving a wide selection of beer, wine, cocktails, and non-alcoholic refreshments including coffee and tea, as well as fresh hot popcorn! Outside food is allowed in the bar but not in the cinema. No alcohol from outside allowed. All guests are invited to arrive early and stay late!

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 Level 1. Signage on the door. You can also check our Instagram story highlights for a video showing exactly how to find us: https://www.instagram.com/s/aGlnaGxpZ2h0OjE3OTMzMTA2Mjk0MDI5MjM1

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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