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Power Trip
“A first-rate documentary which impresses on a number of
levels, Power Trip provides unique insights into the role
played by a major American company in an impoverished,
corrupt, almost Third World country, Georgia. Made with deft
evenhandedness, Paul Devlin’s accomplished film plays almost
like a fictional drama, containing suspense, comedy and some
colorful characters,” wrote David Stratton for Variety.
In Power Trip, winner of numerous film awards,
documentarian Paul Devlin (SlamNation) tells the story of the
chaotic post-Soviet transition in Tbilisi, Republic of
Georgia, through culture clash, electricity disconnections and
blackouts. AES Corp., the massive American “global power
company,” purchased the privatized electricity distribution
company in Tbilisi, capital of the former Soviet Republic of
Georgia. AES manager Piers Lewis was faced with training the
formerly communist populace that, in this new world, customers
pay for their electricity. The Georgians meanwhile, from
pensioners to the Energy Minister, devised ever more clever
ways to get it free.
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Amidst hot tempers and high drama, Lewis struggled to
balance his love for the Georgian people with the hardships
his company created trying to build a nation from the rubble
of Soviet collapse.
Piers Lewis, the main character in Power Trip is a
University of Michigan classmate of director Paul Devlin.
Lewis, who had lived in Tbilisi for years and spoke fluent
Georgian, pitched the film to Devlin, and provided unusual
access to AES-Telasi.
At first Devlin felt that trying to portray the transition
from collapsed communism to capitalism was too monumental a
story with too many complicated abstractions to convey in a
movie—until Piers explained that the reason for his
shoulder-length hair was that he refused to cut it until the
electricity bill collection rate increased from 10% to 50%.
Paul realized that Piers’ daily visual reminder to his
Georgian co-workers could provide a dramatic structure for the
movie—whether or not Piers cut his hair would represent the
progress of Georgian electricity reform.
Official website
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| A scene from the documentary Power Trip
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CAST
Piers
Lewis Akaki Gogichaishvili Leeka
Basilaia Michael Scholey
CREW
Director:
Paul Devlin Editor: Paul
Devlin Producer: Paul
Devlin Co-producers: Valery Odikadze,
Claire Missanelli Cinematography: Paul
Devlin, Valery Odikadze Distributed by:
Artistic License Films English and Georgian
with English subtitles
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