Tangerines: The Geometry of Peace
When filmmakers attempt to capture the horror of war, they usually default to scale. They show us sweeping, chaotic battlefields and exploding cities. In Tangerines, Zaza Urushadze realizes that scale often dilutes tragedy. To convey the massive, senseless geopolitical disaster of the 1992 War in Abkhazia, he did not build a battlefield. He built a chamber play. The Micro-Scale DMZ The film restricts the conflict almost entirely to the interior of a single, remote farmhouse. By trapping a wounded Georgian soldier and a wounded Chechen mercenary under the roof of an elderly Estonian carpenter, Urushadze turns a domestic space into a high-stakes, micro-scale demilitarized zone. ...