Returning to Tbilisi with his fellow Georgian
Revaz Chkheidze, Abuladze joined the
Gruziafilm studios and together they began their career making documentary films about their country's folklore. In 1955 they made their first non-documentary film, ''
Magdana's Donkey'', which won the Best Short Film award at Cannes in 1956. Abuladze's next work was the feature-length ''
Other People's Children (1958), a psychological portrait of life in Tbilisi. This was followed by Me, Grandma, Iliko and Ilarion (1962), a tragicomedy of morals in a mountain village, and the lyrical comedy A Necklace for My Beloved'' (1973). Abuladze's reputation is, however, based on a trilogy of films that deal with fundamental questions of good and evil, love and hate, life and death. The first of these,
The Plea (1968), was inspired by the
poems of
Vazha-Pshavela and shot in black-and-white against the severe Georgian landscape familiar from other films of the time. The second film in the trilogy,
The Wishing Tree (1971), was an epic tale set in the same landscape and focusing on the hopes and reveries of a young woman and a man's search for the mythical tree that will make dreams come true.
The Wishing Tree won festival prizes in Moscow,
Czechoslovakia and Italy, and was awarded the State Prize of the
Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic. From 1974 Abuladze taught at the
Rustaveli Institute from which he had graduated three decades earlier. In 1978 Abuladze joined the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union, a normal career move at that time and in that context. In 1980 he was awarded the title People's Artist of the USSR. By now he was one of the leading Soviet Georgian filmmakers. On the surface, he was the perfect example of the Soviet cultural nomenklatura. Then in 1983–84 he made
Repentance, the film (made for Georgian television) that was to catapult him to worldwide attention. Like so many other films of the "period of stagnation",
Repentance was left "on the shelf". So fearful was Abuladze that his film would be destroyed that he is reputed to have kept the only remaining copy under his bed. When
Mikhail Gorbachev and
glasnost arrived and the old guard in the Soviet filmmakers' union was unanimously ejected in 1986, a Conflict Commission was established to review these shelved films. With encouragement from the then-Soviet Foreign Minister,
Eduard Shevardnadze,
Repentance was released, first in Georgia and then across the Soviet Union, where it attracted record audiences and became the flagship film of the whole glasnost process. == Filmography ==