| Cinema of Georgia | |
|---|---|
Apollo Cinema inBatumi | |
| No. ofscreens | 23 (2017)[1] |
| • Per capita | 0.7 per 100,000 (2017)[1] |
| Main distributors | Fox (London) 25.0% Buesta Vista Song Pictures 19.0% Warner Bros 13.0%[2] |
| Produced feature films (2011)[3] | |
| Fictional | 12 (85.7%) |
| Animated | - |
| Documentary | 2 (14.3%) |
| Number of admissions (2010)[4] | |
| Total | 144,039 |
| National films | 66,200 (46.0%) |
| Gross box office (2010)[4] | |
| Total | GEL 1.25 million |
| National films | GEL 626,000 (50.1%) |


Thecinema of Georgia has been noted for itscinematography in Europe.Italian film directorFederico Fellini was an admirer of the Georgian film: "Georgian film is a completely unique phenomenon, vivid, philosophically inspiring, very wise, childlike. There is everything that can make me cry and I ought to say that it (my crying) is not an easy thing."[5]
| Part of a series on |
| Georgians ქართველები |
|---|
The Kartvelian people |
| Nation |
| Georgia |
| Ancient Kartvelian people |
| Subgroups |
| Culture |
| Languages |
| Religion |
| Symbols |
| History of Georgia |
Georgian cinematography's reputation has been built by known cinema directors such as:
From 2012, the main focus of Georgian cinema is supporting script writing and European co-productions.[6]