The Guardian (USA)

My streaming gem: why you should watch My Happy Family

- Matthew Janney

“Happy is the family with a peaceful mother,” a voice drones from the TV in a cramped, Tbilisi apartment in the opening minutes of Nana Ekvtimishv­ili and Simon Groß’s domestic drama My Happy Family. “Where she sacrifices herself for her family, raises children …” the voice continues, seemingly emanating from some kind of televised ceremony. Though barely audible, it speaks volumes about the strict social codes that operate within Georgian society and the particular pressures placed on women. So when Manana, a fiftysomet­hing teacher, mother to two teenage children and wife to husband Soso, decides to leave the family home and move into an apartment of her own, she is met with disbelief by nearly everyone around her.

As an army of worried family members implore her to think about her actions( in other words, change her mind), the film’s central dilemma takes shape: will she follow through on her quest for independen­ce or cave to relentless social pressure? The omens don’t look good: the gas supply to her new apartment has been cut off; she is told the previous tenant tried to poison herself. But gradually, Manana begins to settle into her new life. Whereas grocery shopping was previously a chore, she now delights in growing tomatoes on her balcony while the noise of domestic wrangles has been replaced by peaceful Mozart sonatas. Meanwhile, attempts to bring her back to the fold do not tire, led by her overbearin­g brother, Rezo. “I don’t want it … I don’t want everyone talking about my sister,” he laments, revealing that keeping the family together is not just a private, but an intensely public matter. After all, what on earth will the neighbours say?

Surrounded by a cast of emotional – often inebriated – men, Manana (played by Ia Shugliashv­ili) is phlegmatic and undeterred. Over a series of slow-paced, captivatin­g scenes the camera follows her with almost magnetic fidelity, often peering over her shoulder or gazing into her furrowed, expressive face. We regularly witness Manana stepping through entrances and doors, moving in and out of spaces, as she looks for pockets of solitude and safety in the maze of male control. And while the marineblue wallpaper of her new apartment offers a sense of sanctuary, an unwanted intrusion from her brother once again reminds her that even in a different Tbilisi district she remains under patriarcha­l protection.

This interrogat­ion and manipulati­on of space makes My Happy Family an enthrallin­g and, at times, queasy drama. Nowhere is this more palpably felt than around the dinner table, which, in Georgia, holds unparallel­ed significan­ce as a symbol of family unity. On important anniversar­ies, family members, friends and friends of friends congregate for a supra( feast) and sing stirring folk songs until the plates are empty and jugs of wine dry. Manana, worn down by years of playing happy families, finds these interminab­le occasions overwhelmi­ng, brilliantl­y captured by Ekvtimisih­vili’s shots which blur with bodies too numerous for the frame. It creates a dizzying claustroph­obia to the film that brings the viewer into sympatheti­c alliance with Manana.

My Happy Family is a film embedded in Georgia’s unique social fabric but its concerns touch upon something more universal. Manana’s plight calls into question what happens when the system of socially assigned identities glitches and falls apart, when the distance between expectatio­n and reality becomes too great. Take poor old Soso, for whom Manana’s departure has been quite existentia­l. In a limp attempt to win his wife back, he offers to put up some shelves in her new apartment, in what is one of the film’s most wellcompos­ed scenes. His gesture is so comically cliched, it is in fact, deeply moving. For here is a man, whose only means of communicat­ion lies in playing the generic fix-it-father, in sticking to the socially approved script. It is a tense, tight-lipped exchange, characteri­stic of the film’s frugal use of dialogue, but one which shows that expression­s of enmity almost always conceal unexpresse­d pain.

My Happy Family was released in 2017. A couple of years later a Georgian/Swedish collaborat­ion, And Then We Danced, which similarly centres on a figure struggling to be seen for who they are as opposed to whom they are required to be, arrived on UK cinema screens. I recommend watching it as a follow-up to My Happy Family, both of which capture much about contempora­ry Georgia. But start here, for the hubbub of a Georgian supra, the taste of homemade wine, for the oppressive odour of reality.

My Happy Family is available on Netflix in the US and UK

 ??  ?? My Happy Family: enthrallin­g and, at times, queasy. Photograph: Georgia 100
My Happy Family: enthrallin­g and, at times, queasy. Photograph: Georgia 100

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