Why Levan Akin Wonât Show His New Movie âCrossingâ in Georgia
When Levan Akinâs movie âAnd Then We Danced,â a romance between men in a Georgian folk-dance troupe, premiered at Cannes in 2019, it became a festival hit and later an Oscars submission. But when it screened in Georgia later that year, the movieâs combination of traditional Georgian culture and gay love sparked violent protests from conservative groups.
Akinâs latest film, âCrossing,â which opens in U.S. theaters Friday, also deals with L.G.B.T. themes, though the filmmaker said recently that he had hoped its reception in Georgia would be smoother. Its plot, about a woman who travels from Georgia to Turkey to search for her estranged trans niece, seemed unlikely be perceived as an attack Georgian culture in the same way, he said.
But this spring, when Georgiaâs capital, Tbilisi, erupted in weeks of protests against a law on foreign influence that critics said would hamper Georgiaâs chances of joining the European Union, Akin decided against releasing the movie there in such a polarized climate.
âThere is such political turmoil,â Akin said, âand we donât want the film to be used as fodder in the debate. I donât want that to repeat.â
In âCrossing,â Lia (Mzia Arabuli), a retired and unmarried history teacher, travels to Istanbul from the city of Batumi, on Georgiaâs Black Sea coast, searching for her niece Tekla, who has fled after her family rejected her. Lia is assisted in scouring the cityâs narrow streets and packed rooming houses by Evrim (Deniz Dumanli), a trans rights activist and lawyer. They form an unlikely bond â but finding Tekla proves difficult.
L.G.B.T. visibility is a frequent flashpoint for tensions in Georgia, a socially conservative country in the Caucasus, strongly influenced by the Orthodox Church, that was part of the Soviet Union until 1991. While Tbilisi is home to some L.G.B.T.-friendly clubs and bars, many Georgians hold reactionary views about sexuality and gender. An attempt to stage a gay pride march in Tbilisi last year was aborted after hundreds of right-wing activists attacked the gathering.
In June, the governing Georgian Dream party stirred those divisions when it brought forward another contentious bill. The proposed law, which Parliament will vote on in the fall, is called âOn Family Values and the Protection of Minorsâ and is accompanied by suggested amendments to 18 other laws. The legislative package includes bans on gender-affirming surgery and gender changes in legal documents; it also includes prohibitions on sharing information that âaims to popularize identifying with a gender different from oneâs biological sexâ and depictions of same-sex relationships.
Though the legislation is vaguely worded, the speaker of Georgiaâs parliament, Shalva Papuashvili, told reporters on June 4 that the proposed bans on what he called L.G.B.T. âpropagandaâ would affect broadcasters and movie theaters, according to Open Caucasus Media, an independent news organization.
Many Georgian filmmakers were already complaining about what they see as government interference in their art. More than 450 movie industry professionals are boycotting the Georgian National Film Center, the government agency that supports film production, whose leadership, they say, has been stuffed with government stooges. In a statement, the agency said it could not discuss how the proposed anti-L.G.B.T. law would affect moviemaking in Georgia. âSince the text is currently a draft,â it said in a statement, âwe believe it is not possible to comment on its impact.â Georgiaâs culture ministry did not respond to several requests for comment.
Akin said that Georgia had become more polarized over L.G.B.T rights after a recent change of tack by the Georgian Dream government. The party adopted a more permissive attitude after taking office in 2012, when it aspired to lead the country into the European Union, but lately, it has taken on a repressive stance as it orients itself toward Russia.
âTo see that things are going in this direction is frankly quite depressing,â Akin said. He added, however, that he remained optimistic. Filmmaking was a âform of therapy,â he said, and a reminder âthat humans are also very capable of empathy and solidarity.â
Akin said he had worked collaboratively with trans members of the âCrossingâ cast and crew, as well as an Istanbul-based trans support association, Pink Life, to create an authentic world in the movie.
âPart of the seed of âCrossingâ was that I met with trans women in Tbilisi who told me they would go a lot to Istanbul,â where they could âjust disappear in the city,â Akin said. âThere, even if some people looked at them in a bad way, it wasnât people that knew them; they were anonymous.â
Dumanli, the actress who plays the trans-rights activist Evrim, said that positive trans roles were rare in movies from Turkey or its neighbors in the Caucasus. âTrans women are always portrayed in stories filled with sorrow, usually ending up with a murder,â she said. ââCrossing,ââ she added, was âmore realistic. It shows these characters as normal people.â
Akin said his own position as a border-crossing outsider â he lives in Sweden, where he was raised by Turkish parents of Georgian heritage â made it easier to raise the funds he needed within Sweden and other countries to bring L.G.B.T. stories from Georgia to the screen.
But many artists without foreign connections are concerned that telling those stories could soon become tough. Taki Mumladze, a Georgian screenwriter, actress and theater director whose work explores sexual identity and desire, said she was concerned that the proposed anti-L.G.B.T. law would make self-reflection in her work âvery difficult,â by forbidding her from discussing themes essential to her.
Mumladze co-wrote and starred in the 2022 movie âA Room of My Own,â a drama with a lesbian sex scene that impressed critics on the festival circuit. This month in Tbilisi, she staged her play âNino: My Aphrodite,â a two-hander about the social barriers to love between two women of a different generation and class.
On the playâs closing night, Mumladze addressed the audience after the curtain call to condemn the proposed legislation as a threat to free expression. Whether the audience liked her play was irrelevant, she said â her characterâs voices had a right to be heard onstage.
âWhen âA Room Of My Ownâ premiered in Georgia, strangers wrote to me a lot about coming out,â she said later in an interview, âso I feel how important it is to speak about such topics.â
âIf we look at history, people always found some way to express themselves. But why should I not be free?,â she said. âI will fight, because there is no way to live with this. A lot of people worked very hard for us to be where we are â and why does our government want to take us back to the Soviet Union?â
Myriam Grigalashvili contributed reporting.
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