If I had to explain the difference

between life and existence,

I would say that 13 - Tzameti

has experience in this.

Rhymes aside, this Georgian director, who writes and directs the film, puts a game of life in front of the camera, but in his own way perhaps tells of existence, of chance. And perhaps it is no accident that the theme upon which all the regurgitated and chewed anxiety accompanying the viewing is built is precisely the game of Russian roulette, the perfect clash between life and chance. The main factors are revealed immediately, in the first minutes of the film:

dear old French cinema + noir + b\n = 13 - Tzameti

The young protagonist: the son of immigrants in France, supports his family with the humble job of a laborer; a face that conveys innocence, an economic condition that softens, a risky move from a twenty-year-old. As the minutes go by, we slip with him into the darkness without really knowing if what we see way down there is glorious light or scalding lava. In the unconscious pursuit of a fortune that fate seems to have placed in his hands, young Sébastien begins a circular journey, the never-ending central stop of which is the harrowing game of death, facing it with a realism stamped on his face that alone is worth the price of admission.

In a whirlwind of anxiety, every perceived movement is terrible, ruthless, especially in an atmosphere made raw and bitter by an almost essential black and white: 13 - Tzameti is the perfect case capable of drawing you in, rather than nauseating you. The journey is almost concentric, with elements that repeat several times, even in terms of script, yet without becoming repetitive, instead distinguished from one another by sequences and directorial choices that, if they had been even more finely tuned and emphasized, would have highlighted the added value of the script and delivered the film to the prestigious label of cult or must which in just four letters feels so badass. Badass like 13 - Tzameti after all.

Don't believe it. I haven't forgotten about the USB stick. I'm sorry.

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