Taranaki Daily News

Tyrannies can’t stand being laughed at

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Russia’s decision to ban British satire The Death of Stalin shows how bombast and bullying hides weakness and self-doubt, says David Aaronovitc­h.

It must have been just like the good old days. On Tuesday in Moscow, a group of politician­s sat down with the culture minister to watch a movie, agreed that they didn’t like it, and decided to suppress it. That film was the British-made satire The Death of Stalin, but the irony of the decision to ban it was lost on those present.

I saw the film last year, and many readers will have seen it, too. It’s hard to pick a favourite from the lineup of grotesque characters: Steve Buscemi’s canny Khrushchev, Simon Russell Beale’s terrifying secret police chief Beria, Jason Isaacs’ impulsive army chief Zhukov, or Michael Palin’s slippery foreign minister Molotov, able to convince and unconvince himself of the most fundamenta­l beliefs within seconds. But though they were all satirical versions of themselves, the essential truth of the drama was that these men constitute­d the heart of a cannibalis­ing tyranny, in which they had been scared witless by, and finally liberated from, the vozhd – the great leader.

So why ban it? A potpourri of reasons was offered by the Russians for the decision.

It was bad timing, coinciding with the 75th anniversar­y of the German surrender at Stalingrad. It was a ‘‘planned provocatio­n’’ (though who by and what of was never made clear). It ‘‘smeared the memory of our people who defeated Nazism’’, apparently. It was an ‘‘absolute pasquinade’’, said Yelena Drapeko, deputy head of the Russian parliament’s culture committee. Which was an odd kind of criticism, since ‘‘pasquinade’’ means lampoon or satire – exactly what The Death of Stalin claims to be.

The awful truth about Stalin shown in the movie is essentiall­y the one revealed by Khrushchev in his famous de-Stalinisat­ion speech to the Communist Party Congress in 1956. Joseph Vissariono­vich was a mass murderer under whose aegis you could be picked up and shot for no good reason at all. Russians have officially known this for years. Even my father, a British Communist Party official who my aunt told me wept on the day that he heard of the dictator’s death, was forced in the end to accept that Stalin had been a bastard.

Russia, of course, is not alone in finding satire hard to stomach. Tyrannies the world over find it impossible to take. Back in 2014, North Korea launched an entire cyberwar against Sony for daring to make fun of Kim Jong-un’s regime in the film The Interview.

Eight years earlier, several Arab nations banned Sacha Baron Cohen’s mock documentar­y Borat. Dubai’s censors cut so much ‘‘offensive’’ material on its release that the 90-minute movie ran to just 30 minutes. Baron Cohen’s later film The Dictator, about a fictional north African leader, attracted similar censorship in one-party states.

Much of the Beijing government’s effort to control Chinese social media is about stamping out jokes at the ruling party’s expense.

Moscow has not always been so hostile to representa­tions of the Stalin era. I recently watched a Russian TV version of Vasily Grossman’s book Life and Fate .It tells the stories of several people during and after World War II. But instead of focusing exclusivel­y on heroic resistance to the invading Germans (though there is plenty of that), it also shows how Russians suffered at the hands of Stalin and his henchmen. One, Krymov, an old Bolshevik and a hero of Stalingrad, is arrested, sent to the Lubyanka and tortured to get him to confess to entirely fictitious crimes.

In 1960, the manuscript of the book was seized from Grossman’s apartment by the KGB. Two years later, the Soviet ideology chief, Mikhail Suslov, apparently told Grossman that his book was so dangerous that it could not be published for two or three centuries. Grossman died in 1964 with the book unpublishe­d. It took Mikhail Gorbachev’s accession to power for Life and Fate to be available to Russians in Russia.

Since the annexation of Crimea in 2014, though, Russian nationalis­m has become far more strident. And a principal beneficiar­y of this is the memory of Stalin. Last year, a Russian poll asked respondent­s to name the greatest person in the world of all time. The poet Pushkin was third, Vladimir Putin was second, and Stalin was top. One can’t help thinking that it’s just as well for Uncle Joe that he’s already dead – Putin hates coming second.

Two other recent Russian TV dramas help to explain the decision to ban The Death of Stalin. One is about Sofya, the 15th-century wife of Ivan III of Muscovy. A beautiful, highcheekb­oned woman, she survives attempts by foreign agents to poison her, defeats the monarchy’s domestic enemies with necessary harshness, and expands Russia’s borders. The second is about Catherine, the 18th-century wife of Tsar Peter III. A beautiful, highcheekb­oned woman, she ... you can guess the rest. It’s exactly the same, down to the princesspo­isoning foreigners.

The theme in both dramas is the one in Sergei Eisenstein’s 1944 film Ivan the Terrible Part I. Russia’s ruler is reluctantl­y forced into despotism by traitors at home and saboteurs abroad. Stalin liked Part I but banned Part II.

Why was Stalin so careful? Why are Russia’s censors so careful now? Because in their minds, powerful traitors and foreign enemies surrounded him then and surround them now. One big dissident breath and the whole fragile edifice might come crashing down.

Their outward show of strength is in inverse proportion to their internal self-confidence. In a situation of such weakness, even the way TV depicts history must be controlled.

One of The Death of Stalin‘s biggest critics is Nikita Mikhalkov, who accused the film of ‘‘smearing the memory’’ of those who fought the Germans. But he is himself a film-maker – his 1994 film about Stalinism, Burnt By the Sun, won an Academy Award. Compare and contrast: we gave him an Oscar and he bans our film. Now a big Putin fan, here he is, like one of those Soviet cultural stooges, arguing for the banning of ‘‘inappropri­ate’’ works of art. For inappropri­ate, read dangerous.

My favourite objection, though, belongs to Yelena Drapeko. The Death of Stalin, she said, was made to convince Russians that ‘‘our people are terrible and our leaders are idiots’’. Our leaders in the present tense. This is odd, because though Beria, Khrushchev and Molotov are in the movie, Putin, Medvedev and Drapeko herself are not.

But what can you say to someone who takes a secret policeman’s cap and jams it so firmly on her own head? Only that it fits all too well.

Even my father, a British Communist Party official who my aunt told me wept on the day that he heard of the dictator’s death, was forced in the end to accept that Stalin had been a bastard.

 ??  ?? Russia has offered a variety of reasons for banning the political satire The Death of Stalin, including that the film was made to convince Russians that ‘‘our people are terrible and our leaders are idiots’’.
Russia has offered a variety of reasons for banning the political satire The Death of Stalin, including that the film was made to convince Russians that ‘‘our people are terrible and our leaders are idiots’’.

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