On 25th December 2011 the Georgian Patriarch Ilia II described his 34 year-long leadership as head of the Georgian Orthodox Church as a ‘sunny night’. Beginning in 1989, and going up to the present, the film essay Sunny Night tells of political and social events since Georgian Independence. A variety of formats and sources, disparate images and voices report on protests, recommencements, uproars and wars, and religious identity that centres around the dominant religion of the nation. In the midst of the ongoing shifts and the various state of affairs, the patriarch stands out as the only constant figure. Meanwhile the sermonised religion begins to take on radical forms, going as far as priests forming front row human-chains, leading protests of several thousand orthodox believers chasing a handful of LGBT activist throughout the streets of Tbilisi in May 2013.
No media sources available
The Sound of Identity
2020
Is Genesis History?
2017
Muxes
2016
Siamo qui
2024
Are You Proud?
2019
Out of the Closet, Off the Screen: The Life of William Haines
2001
I Was Possessed by God
2000
Le regard de Georges Brassens
2013
What God Hath Wrought: Pastor Chuck Smith and the Jesus Revolution
2012
Viacrucis Migrante
2017
© 2025-2026 Cinemaos Private Ltd.
Data provided by Consumet and Tmdb API