Daily Dispatch

Film on slain Putin critic to be released

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TWO years after he was gunned down in Moscow, Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov’s murder remains shrouded in controvers­y, as supporters insist the mastermind­s have yet to be unmasked.

Now a new documentar­y film is set to shine a fresh spotlight on a tumultuous career that saw Nemtsov go from deputy prime minister to fierce Kremlin critic – at a time when his memory is still a sensitive subject for the authoritie­s.

Nemtsov was shot dead on a bridge just metres from the Kremlin as he walked home through central Moscow late on February 27 2015.

The shock killing was the highest-profile assassinat­ion of a Kremlin critic since President Vladimir Putin came to power. While five men have gone on trial accused of carrying out an alleged contract hit, Nemtsov’s family and supporters say the murder trail points to more senior officials in the North Caucasus Chechnya region but complain that those who ordered the killing have got off scot-free.

The new film, entitled The Man Who Was Too Free, does not delve into Nemtsov’s murder but focuses instead on his political conviction­s as he went from Kremlin insider under former president Boris Yeltsin to one of Putin’s most prominent critics.

It is due to roll out across 20 cities, including Moscow, from today after getting officially certified for release in cinemas, to the surprise and delight of those behind it, in a country where works on sensitive subjects can face hurdles.

“I didn’t expect that we would get such a release,” said director Vera Krichevska­ya. “I hope that all will be well.”

The film’s backers include ex-telecoms magnate Dmitry Zimin, who has come under pressure from authoritie­s over his funding of civil society.

But producer Yevgeny Gindilis said documentar­y films had a freer hand to deal with subjects frowned upon by the authoritie­s than Russian-made feature films, which often rely on government funding.

“Documentar­ies let you talk about the topics that concern Russian society,” he said. “In feature films, this has become much more difficult.”

With a budget of just more than 000 (R1.4million), the two-hour film features interviews with major figures from Nemtsov’s political career and archival footage.

Most interviews were done by Mikhail Fishman, editor-in-chief of The Moscow Times newspaper.

The film was a portrait not just of a person but of a period when genuine political debate existed in Russia, said Krichevska­ya, a former journalist for the NTV channel which was forced under state control in 2001. “It’s about the time we’ve lost.”

In 1997, Nemtsov was plucked from being governor of the industrial Nizhny Novgorod region to serve as deputy prime minister by an ailing Yeltsin, who encouraged him to aim for the Kremlin.

After initially backing fellow Yeltsin protégè Putin, Nemtsov became disillusio­ned at what some saw as the strongman’s cold-blooded response to the 2000 sinking of the Kursk nuclear submarine and the 2002 Moscow theatre siege.

He was regularly detained at street protests and became a politician in the provincial city of Yaroslavl.

Former oil magnate and Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky says in the film that Nemtsov would have wanted to die this way, in the public eye and from a bullet.

“This was a ‘good death’,” he says. — AFP

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