WRECKMEISTER HARMONIES: Bela Tarr Tribute at FOMO Cinema Tbilisi
Thursday 11. June at 20:30 - 23:00
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 especially pleased to include WERCKMEISTER HARMONIES in honour of Béla Tarr. Although his filmography is relatively small, his influence on contemporary cinema is enormous. You can see traces of his work everywhere, from slow cinema and arthouse filmmaking to directors who simply learned that a camera could move differently after watching one of his films.
Béla Tarr | 2000 | Hungary | 2h25m + 10 minute intermission | Presented in the original Hungarian audio with English subtitles
WERCKMEISTER HARMONIES is one of those films I kept hearing about for years before finally seeing it. When I did, I understood immediately why so many filmmakers speak about Béla Tarr with a kind of reverence normally reserved for religious figures. I've shown DAMNATION in months past, and have a couple of die-hard Tarr fans in my film club haranguing me to show SATANTANGO, but I opted for WRECKMEISTER because it's his most approachable film (at least in my personal opinion) and that felt important for a tribute.
The story begins when a mysterious circus arrives in a small Hungarian town. Its main attraction is a giant stuffed whale, transported through the streets on a trailer. Alongside it comes a shadowy figure known only as The Prince, whose presence begins to stir fear, anger, and unrest amongst the townspeople. What follows is less a conventional narrative than a slow descent into social collapse.
Tarr's cinema operates at a completely different rhythm to most films. The camera drifts through streets, bars, hospitals, and public squares in long, hypnotic takes that force you to observe rather than simply consume. At first it can feel strange. Then somewhere along the way you stop watching the film and begin living inside it.
What fascinates me most is how difficult the film is to pin down. Some people see it as a political allegory about the collapse of social order. Others see it as a philosophical meditation on crowds, power, and mass hysteria. Still others experience it almost like a dream. All of those readings are valid. The film seems to expand or contract depending on the person watching it.
This isn't always an easy film. It asks for patience and attention. But if you surrender yourself to its rhythm, I think you'll discover one of the most extraordinary cinematic experiences ever made.
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