Close
Monthly Screenings
Writers on Film: Ariana Harwicz
13 Tzameti
Dir.: Gela Babluani | 90 minutes

Other Screenings

Opening remarks by writer Ariana Harwicz

The radical writing of Ariana Harwicz is known for its violence, erotic intensity, and searing social critique. Her work has been translated into more than 15 languages, including English, German, Arabic, and Turkish, and was shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize. Recently, director Martin Scorsese acquired the rights to her novel Die, My Love (published in Hebrew by Zikit in 2015, translated by Michal Shalev), with plans to produce a film adaptation directed by Lynne Ramsay (We Need to Talk About Kevin) and starring Jennifer Lawrence.

Harwicz’s second novel translated into Hebrew, Feebleminded (Nine Lives, 2021, also translated by Michal Shalev), is a bold and thought-provoking work that explores desire, mental illness, and identity. At its center is a woman grappling with alienation, loneliness and longing, while facing the judgment of a society that measures her by irrelevant moral and medical standards

France, Georgia 2005 | 90 minutes | French | Hebrew subtitles

During a temporary job renovating his neighbor’s roof, Sebastian, a Georgian immigrant in France, overhears a conversation about a get-rich-quick scheme. When the neighbor suddenly dies before the job is finished, Sebastian enters the house and finds a letter with instructions to locate a treasure. His hunt leads him into a dangerous game involving the police and other shady characters. Gela Babluani's debut, filmed in stylish black and white, unfolds the plot gradually, revealing details simultaneously to both the protagonist and the viewer, making it one of the more captivating thrillers of the early 2000s.