
Dry Leaf
Shot on an old Sony Ericsson phone, this melancholic mystery from the intrepid Georgian filmmaker Alexandre Koberidze presents the country’s landscapes through a tour of its rural football fields, creating a temporal rhythm and visual texture entirely its own.
Ends Tuesday, April 7!
In soccer, a “dry leaf” is a kick that produces an unpredictable landing of the ball. Shaken by the disappearance of his grown daughter, a sports photographer goes looking for her through a Georgian landscape strewn with football fields. An invisible companion in tow, he meets potential witnesses whose perspectives prove distorted or contradictory. Confirming his position as one of contemporary cinema’s most intrepid artists, director Alexandre Koberidze (What Do We See When We Look at the Sky?, NYFF59) shot the film on an antiquated Sony Ericsson phone. What might seem a perverse choice reveals itself, over Dry Leaf’s epic length, as a brilliant thematic gesture that elicits its own temporal register. Set to a haunting score by the director’s brother Giorgi, this melancholic mystery presents Georgia’s open plains and mountain regions in alien, oneiric contexts. One emerges from its transporting rhythms with a fresh perspective on the world. An NYFF63 Currents selection. A Cinema Guild release.











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