
From March 2 to May 25, Doca FilmClub presents the program “Spring: An Anticipation”.
In the dystopian Metropolis, the story is set in our time, the year 2026. When Fritz Lang made the film in 1927, he imagined the future with very limited technical means, yet created a groundbreaking work that still shapes the language of cinema today.
We have titled our new programme “Spring: An Anticipation,” as the search for new forms, new cinematic language, and responses to urgent questions feels similar to spring, a time of renewal. At the same time, we look back to the past for answers, while trying to imagine a future that is still uncertain.
The selection connects with films from our previous programs and reflects important global issues. The opening film, Writing Life by Claire Simon, can be seen in dialogue with Mutzenbacher by Ruth Beckermann. The interviews with actresses by Delphine Seyrig relate to the ideas of Nina Menkes, while the animations of Suzan Pitt take us into a dreamlike world.
In these uncertain times, we believe that “joy can be a strategy.” Joy is one of the guiding ideas of our program. At the same time, films about war, violence, and colonial history are an important part of the selection, as thinking about them is part of our shared reality. The films vary in form and theme and include some of the most interesting and thought-provoking works of recent years.
Metropolis will close the programme as an invitation to revisit the dystopian vision of 2026 imagined in 1927, in the spring of 2026, and to believe that the future is still possible.
Spring: An Anticipation
films

02/03/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Writing Life
Director: Claire Simon
90’ / 2025 / France
SUB:ENG
French writer and Nobel Prize laureate Annie Ernaux is one of the central figures of contemporary feminism, whose texts bring together intimate and collective experience. Claire Simon observes her work in French classrooms and shows how Ernaux’s words awaken young people in the process of reflecting on their own experiences and striving for freedom.

09/03/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Be pretty and shut up!
Director: Delphine Seyrig
112’ / 1981 / France
SUB:ENG
In 1975 Delphine Seyrig recorded interviews with twenty-four actresses in France and the US, including Maria Schneider, Jane Fonda, and Shirley MacLaine, about their experience across the industry. Through their words, Seyrig reveals the frustrations of working within the patriarchal studio system.

16/03/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Songs of slow-burning Earth
Director: Olha Zhurba
93’ / 2024 / Ukraine, France, Sweden
SUB:ENG
An audiovisual diary of Ukraine’s immersion into the abyss of the first two years of Russia’s full invasion, made up of places, occasional characters, rare dialogues, intraframe sounds, and silences which, when put together, capture the chronology of how the war became normalised against the backdrop of this (meta)physical landscape of collective disaster.

23/03/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Shorts
Whitney Commercial
Director Suzan Pitt
3’ / 1973 / USA
SUB:ENG
Commissioned by David Bienstock, creator of the New American Film Series at the Whitney Museum of Art to raise funds for the second season of the series. The film was projected at the end of each program and a box to receive donations was placed at the exit of the theater. Whitney Commercial ran for two or three years until the Museum agreed to sponsor the series on its own which has continued to the present season.
Gap-Toothed Women
Director: Les Blank, Maureen Gosling, Chris Simon, and Susan Kell
31’ / 1987 / USA
SUB:ENG
Gap-Toothed Women is a documentary that explores cultural ideas of beauty and difference through the experiences of women with a gap between their front teeth. Through informal interviews and everyday moments, the film gently examines self-esteem, discomfort, and self-acceptance, subtly challenging dominant beauty standards while celebrating the value and individuality of each subject.
A PORTRAIT OF GA
Director: Margaret Teit
5’ / 1952 / UK
SUB:ENG
A poetic documentary that portrays the daily life of the filmmaker’s mother, Ga. In just five minutes, it captures human character and the quiet, subtle beauty of everyday life through the camera.
Four Roads
Director: Alice Rohrwacher
8’ / 2020 / Italy
SUB:ENG
In Four Roads, Alice Rohrwacher observes rural neighbors and their daily lives during the pandemic. Shot on 16 mm film, the work brings warmth and intimacy to the screen, showing how human connections can emerge in everyday life despite physical distance.
First Comes Love
Director: Su Friedrich
22’ / 1991 / USA
SUB:ENG
The film shows several wedding ceremonies set to popular love songs. By focusing on details, the exchange of rings, the wedding vows, body language, it invites viewers to reflect on the relationships between love, commitment, and cultural expectations, and to question the meanings behind them.
History of water
Directors: Jean-Luc Godard François Truffaut
12' / 1958 / France
SUB:ENG
This short, partly improvised film uses humor to tell the story of the Paris floods. François Truffaut began filming but quit production out of respect for those left homeless by the disaster. The film was later completed by Jean-Luc Godard. Using bold visual and sound editing typical of the French New Wave, the film features a radical structure and an almost anarchic blend of the conventional and the erudite.
PUSSY/Cipka
Director: Renata Gąsiorowska
8’ / 2019 / Poland
SUB:ENG
A young girl spends the evening alone at home. She decides to have some sweet solo pleasure session, but not everything goes according to plan.
Crocus
Director: Susan Pitt
7’/ 1971 / USA
SUB:ENG
Crocus is one of Suzan Pitt’s earliest experimental animated films, made on 16mm using paper cut-outs and hand-drawn animation. The film has a surreal, poetic tone and shows everyday moments of domestic life in a dreamlike way. Butterflies, birds, flowers, and vegetables move through the space, turning ordinary scenes into something symbolic and strange.

30/03/2026 19:00 at Amirani Cinema
Knits Island
Directed by Ekiem Barbier, Guilhem Causse, Quentin L'Helgouac'h
95’ / 2023 / France
SUB:ENG
Somewhere on the internet is a land where communities pretend to live out a survivalist fiction.
The “players” reveal their fears and fantasies, in an at times unsettling blurring of the real and the virtual. The avatars of the directors of Knit’s Island spent 963 hours there.

06/04/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Bye Bye Tiberias
Director: Lina Soualem
83’ / 2023 / France, Palestine
SUB:ENG
Leaving her village to follow her dream of becoming an actress, Hiam Abbass also left behind her mother, grandmother and seven sisters. Thirty years later, her filmmaker daughter Lina returns with her to journey through the vanished places among the scattered memories of four generations.

13/04/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Dahomey
Director: Mati Diop
68’ / 2024 / France, Senegal
SUB:ENG
In 2021, 26 objects from the Kingdom of Dahomey leave Paris and are returned to present-day Benin. How should these art treasures, stolen from ancestors, be received in a country that has reinvented itself in their absence?

20/04/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
The Andersson Brothers
Director: Johanna Bernhardson
85’ / 2024 / Sweden, Finland
SUB:ENG
Brothers Leif, Ronny, Roy, and Kjell haven’t seen each other in ten years. There was no great conflict, they simply drifted apart. Their lives took very different paths – Roy Andersson is a world-renowned filmmaker, Kjell makes historical documentaries, Leif was a political activist and athlete. Ronny wrestled all his life with alcohol and drug abuse and died in a homeless shelter. Leif’s daughter Johanna, the mother of three children, wants to bring the surviving siblings together and make a film about them. But it is harder than she thought. The film’s interviews, documentary footage, and archive material give equal time to each of the brothers, the famous and the less so. It covers their childhood in a working-class Gothenburg family, their youth, and the way they deal with illness and alcoholism, which have touched all of them. Her film is a very personal portrait of a family, but also a reflection on art, alienation, and what is really important in the end.
Meeting with the director

27/04/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Radiograph of a Family
Director: Firouzeh Khosrovani
82’ / 2020 / Iran, Norway, Switzerland
Radiograph of a Family is a poetic documentary by Firouzeh Khosrovani that explores her parents’ marriage as a reflection of Iran’s cultural and political tensions. The film uses family photos, archival footage, letters, and voice-overs to tell the story of a secular, Western-minded father and a deeply religious mother whose differences shaped both their home and their country’s history before and after the Iranian Revolution.

04/05/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Gambling, Gods and LSD
Director: Peter Mettler
180’ / 2002 / Canada, Switzerland
SUB:ENG
Peter Metler’s documentary takes the form of a journey, exploring people’s search for ecstasy, faith and transcendent experiences. The camera moves through different cultures and places - from the world of gambling to religious rituals and psychedelic experiments. It is a meditative journey about belief, chance and the meaning of life.

11/05/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
De Facto
Director: Selma Doborac
130’ / 2023 / Austria, Germany
SUB:ENG
How can cinema deal with complicity in crimes against humanity, extreme violence and state terror without conniving in it? De Facto finds answers to this question via two actors, a precisely compiled collage of texts and a deliberately reduced setting.

18/05/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
La belle année
Director: Angelica Ruffier
95’ / 2026 / Sweden, Norway
While emptying her childhood home after the death of her father, Angelica reminisces about an intense and solitary love she had as a teenager.
Meeting with the director

25/05/2026 19:00 At Amirani Cinema
Metropolis
Director: Fritz Lang
150’ / 1927 / Germany
One of the most iconic films ever made, Fritz Lang’s dystopian classic is as thrilling today as it was on release in 1927. A mind-blowing visual symphony, Lang’s deeply influential vision is both the foundation of sci-fi cinema and a time-honoured gateway to the expressive wonders of silent film.
The screening is presented with the support of the Goethe Institut Tbilisi.
We would like to thank Amirani cinema for providing the cinema for the Film Club.
Supporters of the curated program











