The Guardian (USA)

Navalny review – staggering portrait of Putin’s extraordin­ary arch-enemy

- Peter Bradshaw

It’s impossible to watch this absorbing documentar­y about anti-Putin dissident Alexei Navalny without a terrible suspicion entering your mind: did Putin order his grotesque Ukraine invasion because of Navalny? Was it a diversiona­ry tactic against the huge, growing wave of protest spearheade­d by Navalny who, in 2021, had defiantly returned to Russia from German exile and whose instant arrest and imprisonme­nt merely fanned the flames of his internatio­nal celebrity? Putin was no doubt deeply enraged by this socialmedi­a megastar who had not only survived a Novichok assassinat­ion attempt but then humiliated the Kremlin by unmasking his malign and cack-handed would-be killers online.

Navalny is an extraordin­ary figure in many ways: approachab­le, telegenic and easygoing. Or mostly easygoing, anyway: he can still sound irritable and defensive when questioned about his appearance­s on the same stage as extreme Russian nationalis­ts about 10 years earlier, and perhaps this film could have looked harder at the facts of Navalny’s early life. But the real eyeopener is the interview with the Bulgarian

investigat­ive journalist Christo Grosev of the website Bellingcat who managed such breathtaki­ng feats of detection on Navalny’s behalf in finding the FSB assailants. Grosev is all about data: by getting hold of passenger manifests, travel details or call records – and everything digital leaves a trace – he can put together an objective picture, even retrieving the culprits’ passport photos.

It is quite staggering. And Navalny’s story has a particular resonance in Britain: he survived, but Dawn Sturgess did not – the blameless British national was fatally poisoned with Novichok on British soil in 2018, as the chaotic byproduct of a bungling attempt by Russian agents to kill former agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury. For so many reasons, Navalny’s story concerns us all.

• Navalny is released on 12 April in cinemas.

 ?? Terrible suspicion … Navalny. Photograph: Courtesy of Dogwoof ??
Terrible suspicion … Navalny. Photograph: Courtesy of Dogwoof

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