| /TD> |
|
| |
| |
| |
International
Showcase
Power
Trip USA, Republic of
Georgia, 2003, 85 Minutes Director: Paul
Devlin
Canadian
Premiere
| | |
| |
|
Twelve years after declaring independence from Soviet rule,
some Georgians are literally still in the dark about democracy
and freedom. Understandably, western idealism is cold comfort
when you can’t turn the lights on. America’s AES Corp., the
largest independent owner of power assets in the world, has
purchased the electricity distribution company in the Georgian
capital, Tbilisi. AES manager Piers Lewis must now train the
formerly communist populace that, in this new world, customers
pay for their electricity. Meanwhile the Georgians – everyone
from meter readers to the Energy Minister himself – devise
ever more clever ways to steal it. In an environment where
political assassinations and al-Qaeda turfings are as
commonplace as street riots and blackouts, the link between
electricity and power has never been so plain. Filmmaker Paul
Devlin examines in stark detail the plight of a people as they
build a nation from the rubble of Soviet collapse.
Myrocia
Watamaniuk.
| | |