In the film, seven sports women who live in seven different Lithuanian cities speak about their opinions on the ‘seven deadly sins’ (Sloth, Pride, Wrath, Gluttony, Lust, Envy, and Greed) from a contemporary perspective. The sports women are metaphorically locked in a set of duels, reflective of the competitive nature of the sports they pursue, and in an inner-fight between their Manichean personalities that entwine – darkness and light. This duality, and battle, is a constant in both art and life. The documentary explores and portrays a contemporary heroine, and heroism, pitched against the interior legend of persistent work and practice.
In the context of current socio-economic crisis, this documentary was inspired by Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht’s 1933 ballet chanté, a ballet with singing, The Seven Deadly Sins (Die sieben Todsünden), which portrays two sisters (that is representative of a dual personality) who travel to seven different cities in search of their fortune during the Great Depression.
The film has a performative character as the heroines reconstruct social roles through their set of duels. They represent an active – not passive – and volitional 'other'. 7 Sins deconstructs, via positive identification with its feminine subjects, the Judeo-Christian sinfulness of the female body.