Don Jon Qartulad -

Note: If you are referring to a different work (e.g., a Georgian short film, a book, or a stage adaptation with the same title), please clarify. The review below assumes you mean the Georgian-dubbed or subtitled release of the mainstream film, as "Qartulad" means "in Georgian." Overview Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Don Jon (original English title) arrived in Georgia with a Georgian dubbing or subtitling, marketed as Don Jon Qartulad . The film follows Jon Martello Jr. (Gordon-Levitt), a New Jersey bartender obsessed with pornography, his body, his car, and his “family.” His shallow worldview collides with reality when he meets Barbara Sugarman (Scarlett Johansson), a romantic-comedy addict who demands emotional intimacy he cannot provide.

The film’s central metaphor—porn vs. romantic comedies as twin delusions—requires linguistic nuance. The Georgian script slightly overexplains the parallel, losing some of the original’s elegant irony. Additionally, Jon’s climactic line (“It was real. It was fucking real.”) loses the impact of the English expletive, as Georgian profanity operates differently in emotional contexts. don jon qartulad

(Assuming a standard professional dub) The voice actor for Jon captures Gordon-Levitt’s blend of bravado and vulnerability. Barbara’s lines land with the same sugary manipulation, and Julianne Moore’s Esther (the older, wiser classmate) sounds appropriately weary and grounded. The weakest link is Tony Danza’s cameo as Jon Sr.—his specific New York cadence feels flattened in Georgian. Note: If you are referring to a different work (e

Recommended for: Adults who appreciate translated American indies. Not for: Anyone offended by explicit language or sexual content. Would you like a comparison of the original English vs. Georgian scripts, or a review of a different Don Jon Qartulad (e.g., a Georgian short film with that exact title)? not fantasy—while making local adjustments.

Don Jon Qartulad is a solid localization of a smart, crude indie film. It retains the core message—that genuine intimacy requires vulnerability, not fantasy—while making local adjustments. If you’re a Georgian speaker who enjoys character-driven dramedies with sharp editing and honest performances, this version is worth watching.

Georgian audiences may find Jon’s hyper-confession-to-a-priest scenes either foreign or relatable, given Georgia’s strong Orthodox Christian traditions. The film’s critique of performative religiosity (confessing “impure thoughts” while lying about other sins) translates well. However, the bar/club scenes feel less alien—Tbilisi’s nightlife has its own share of “players” and romantic idealists.