განძი სამ ოკეანეში (The Treasure of Three Oceans)
As police arrive, the crew simply walks out the service entrance, blending into the crowd of grape-treaders singing folk songs.
"First, we flood the air with the scent of tklapi (fruit leather) to confuse the biometric sniffer dogs. Second, Gela's bell-device vibrates the quantum random-number generators into a predictable sequence — a prayer pattern, he calls it. Third, during the midnight toast to the 'health of our enemies,' Nino replaces the security feed not with a loop, but with a continuous shot from a 1987 Georgian film, 'Repentance' — so beautiful that guards watch it twice before noticing the vault is empty."
Dato then delivers a three-minute toast — a masterpiece of Georgian rhetoric — recounting every betrayal Rezo committed, each line ending with a sip of wine. The oligarch's associates laugh. Rezo's pride shatters louder than any glass.
Dato keeps nothing. He returns to the sulfur baths, lights a cigarette, and tells the ghost of his father: "We didn't steal. We just redistributed the poetry."
"Rezo, Gaumarjos! (Victory!)" he shouts. "In Qartulad tradition, a thief who steals during a supra must be forgiven if he offers a better toast."
When a Tbilisi nightclub owner double-crosses his old partners, they assemble a crew of Georgian fixers, winemakers, and former Soviet cyber-experts to pull off the most elegant heist in the history of the Black Sea resort town, Batumi.
The plan, told in the measured, poetic cadence of Georgian storytelling:
"ეს ამბავი გამოგონილია. მაგრამ ღვინო ნამდვილია." (“This story is invented. But the wine is real.”) The story blends the cool, synchronized rhythm of Soderbergh’s Ocean’s films with the warm, melancholic, and toasting-heavy soul of Georgian cinema — where revenge is served not with bullets, but with a perfect supra and a longer memory than any vault can hold.
The target: Rezo's newly built casino shaped like the Golden Fleece, on the Batumi seaside. The gimmick: during the Rtveli , Rezo unveils a "diamond-encrusted wine horn" worth $50 million.
Rati translates the problem: "Rezo, the casino owner in Batumi, took everything. Our money. Our pride. And he insulted Nino's khachapuri recipe."
In the winding, cobblestone streets of Old Tbilisi, where sulfur baths steam under ancient balconies, a man named Dato (the Georgian "Danny Ocean") sits across from Rati (his "Rusty"). They speak not in rapid-fire English, but in Qartulad — Georgian — with its rolling consonants and ancient script.