Tato Kotetishvili’s debut Holy Electricity is a unique film that finds the extraordinary in the ordinary and poetry in the absurd. It follows Goga and his uncle Bart, who craft neon crosses from scrap, creating their own world and aesthetic. With non-professional actors, the film shines through humor, warmth, poverty, teenage romance, and a subtle queerness. Tbilisi’s landscape is more than a backdrop – it shapes the tone and rhythm of this quietly rebellious, deeply human story.