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ABIERTA LA INSCRIPCIÓN

INGRESO MARZO 2026

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Dirección

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Cine de Animación

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Compaginación

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Dirección de Arte

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Fotografía y Cámara

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Guion

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Producción

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Maestría en Cine Documental

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Especialización en Inteligencia Artificial

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Especialización en Cine Documental

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Especialización en Escritura de Guion de Series

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In Episode 8, during the legendary Christmas Eve confrontation, Datuashvili delivers the line “Uchxari, bolo!” (უჩხარი, ბოლო!—"Idiot, that’s it!") with such gravelly, tear-soaked fury that Georgian viewers forgot to read the subtitles. Local critics have compared her performance to a young Nani Bregvadze—if Bregvadze had decided to throw a desk across a classroom.

The show’s setting was also subtly "Kartvelized." While the characters still attend Ohashi High School, the background banter features Georgian mannerisms. Ryuuji’s mother, Yasuko, calls him "bavshviko" (baby) with a Tbilisian lilt. The class representative, Yusaku Kitamura, becomes a bizarrely accurate parody of a Georgian "gogo momaval" (good boy from a good family), obsessed with order and suluguni cheese metaphors. When the dub was leaked online in 2018 (before a proper TV broadcast on Imedi TV in 2020), it sparked a subculture. Georgian Gen Z abandoned Russian-dubbed Naruto for Toradora clips.

In the end, when Taiga finally returns to Ryuuji, she doesn't say, "I love you." She says, (You are mine, and I am yours. This is non-negotiable.)

In the sprawling universe of anime localization, certain dubs become legendary: the booming Latin American Dragon Ball Z , the chaotic Italian Evangelion , or the meme-worthy German Digimon . But in the mountainous crossroads of Eastern Europe, a quiet revolution has taken place. Georgia—known for its polyphonic singing, khachapuri, and the ancient Kartuli language—has produced what might be the most emotionally raw and culturally specific anime dub of the 21st century: .

And that, dear reader, is the most Georgian thing in the world.

Qartulad - Toradora

In Episode 8, during the legendary Christmas Eve confrontation, Datuashvili delivers the line “Uchxari, bolo!” (უჩხარი, ბოლო!—"Idiot, that’s it!") with such gravelly, tear-soaked fury that Georgian viewers forgot to read the subtitles. Local critics have compared her performance to a young Nani Bregvadze—if Bregvadze had decided to throw a desk across a classroom.

The show’s setting was also subtly "Kartvelized." While the characters still attend Ohashi High School, the background banter features Georgian mannerisms. Ryuuji’s mother, Yasuko, calls him "bavshviko" (baby) with a Tbilisian lilt. The class representative, Yusaku Kitamura, becomes a bizarrely accurate parody of a Georgian "gogo momaval" (good boy from a good family), obsessed with order and suluguni cheese metaphors. When the dub was leaked online in 2018 (before a proper TV broadcast on Imedi TV in 2020), it sparked a subculture. Georgian Gen Z abandoned Russian-dubbed Naruto for Toradora clips.

In the end, when Taiga finally returns to Ryuuji, she doesn't say, "I love you." She says, (You are mine, and I am yours. This is non-negotiable.)

In the sprawling universe of anime localization, certain dubs become legendary: the booming Latin American Dragon Ball Z , the chaotic Italian Evangelion , or the meme-worthy German Digimon . But in the mountainous crossroads of Eastern Europe, a quiet revolution has taken place. Georgia—known for its polyphonic singing, khachapuri, and the ancient Kartuli language—has produced what might be the most emotionally raw and culturally specific anime dub of the 21st century: .

And that, dear reader, is the most Georgian thing in the world.

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