“The entire city is one giant catalogue of advertisements, one enormous menu — and it is especially hard for me to endure it, particularly on an empty stomach.”
“Hunger” is a contemporary parable about living inside a system that turns survival into a competition and makes guilt the primary burden.
At the moment of collective failure, the characters begin searching for individual solutions. But when the system itself is criminal, the line between guilt and innocence gradually fades.
Dato Tavdze explores the realities of economic pressure, moral exhaustion, and silence, posing a simple yet unsettling question:
will the hungry endure long enough for hunger to become a political issue?
