Beyond the Laughter Track: Why “Bojack Horseman Qartulad” Hits Different in Georgian
Dubbed in Georgian? No way. A look at how the existential dread of Bojack Horseman translates into the Georgian language, the cult following in Tbilisi, and why “Qartulad” might be the most depressing—and best—way to watch the show. If you had told me five years ago that I would be sobbing over a cartoon horse speaking Georgian, I would have laughed. But here we are.
One fan favorite from Season 3 shows a billboard for “Secretariat.” In the Georgian version, the subtitle jokes that the movie is “produced by the Rustavi 2 news team”—a dark nod to Georgia’s own tumultuous media landscape. Bojack Horseman Qartulad
Georgian is an ancient, guttural, and incredibly expressive language. It carries a weight that English often smooths over. When Bojack mutters, “What are you doing here?” in English, it sounds like a catchphrase. When the Georgian dub delivers “აქ რას აკეთებ?” (Ak ras aketeb?), it sounds like a soul being crushed under a velvet boot.
Good luck. The official Netflix Georgian dub is available if you set your profile language to Georgian (or use a VPN to Georgia). However, the true treasure is the fan-edit community on Reddit (r/Sakartvelo) who have subtitled the untranslatable puns. If you had told me five years ago
What makes the “Qartulad” experience unique is the localization of the visual gags. In English, the background newspapers read “Horseman Lost at Sea.” In Georgian, the typesetters actually went in and changed the text to local jokes.
The voice actors for the Georgian dub (who remain criminally under-credited) faced an impossible task. How do you translate “That went better than most of my Christmases” (a reference to his traumatic childhood) without losing the rhythm? The answer, it turns out, is leaning into Georgian fatalism. Georgian is an ancient, guttural, and incredibly expressive
Georgia has a history. It has survived revolutions, wars, and the collapse of empires. There is a cultural understanding of “sadness as a default state” that Americans simply don’t have.
And in Georgian, the void stares back in cursive.
There is a Georgian word: “წყენა” (ts’q’ena). It means a specific kind of sorrow, resentment, and melancholy you hold for someone you still love. The English script uses 20 words to describe this. The Georgian Bojack says one word, and you feel it in your bones.