Bangkok Post

Ukrainians at Cannes call for total Russian ban

- ERIC RANDOLPH

Ukrainians at the Cannes Film Festival said last week that all Russians should have been banned from the event — even those who have spoken out against the war.

“We feel strongly that anything and everything Russian must be cancelled,” said Andrew Fesiak, founder of Ukrainian production firm F Films.

“At a time when Ukrainian filmmakers are forced to stop making movies because they either need to flee for their lives or take up arms… Russian filmmakers cannot pretend that everything is fine and that they are not to blame,” he added.

Fesiak was speaking at a panel at the festival co-organised by the Ukrainian and American delegation­s.

The speakers were critical of the festival’s decision to include Russian director Kirill Serebrenni­kov in the competitio­n for the Palme d’Or with his film Tchaikovsk­y’s Wife.

Serebrenni­kov has gone into exile since the invasion of Ukraine and called for an end to the war at his film’s premiere on Wednesday.

But the Ukrainian panel said his history of taking Russian government money meant he was complicit with the regime.

“Serebrenni­kov’s whole career was financed with Russian government money. They don’t finance people who are opposition,” said Fesiak.

In an interview, the director said he understood the position of Ukrainians.

“They are in a terrible situation, this war is a catastroph­e,” Serebrenni­kov said.

“For them it’s even difficult to hear the Russian language. I can understand that.

“But for European culture to cut off Russian culture would be a big mistake and I’m happy the festival chose the right way — not to work with officials but not to ban an independen­t Russian film with a sad story from the 19th century,” he added.

Another member of the Ukrainian panel, Andriy Khalpakhch­i of the Kyiv Internatio­nal Film Festival, said Tchaikovsk­y’s Wife had been funded with “black money” linked to Russian oligarch (and former Chelsea owner) Roman Abramovitc­h.

He said there was no such thing as “good Russians” at the current time.

“I know a few good Russians but most good Russians ended with Crimea,” Khalpakhch­i said, referring to the annexation of the Crimean peninsula by Russia in 2014.

Serebrenni­kov said Abramovitc­h was just one source of financing for his film out of “lots of European funds”.

“He is a guy who’s helped lots of contempora­ry art projects in Russia,” Serebrenni­kov said, adding that Abramovich had also been involved in negotiatio­ns and “is the only person that Ukrainians trust”.

The war has already been a major theme at the festival, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky making a surprise video appearance at the opening ceremony on Tuesday and a special screening on Thursday of Mariupolis 2, a documentar­y by Lithuanian director Mantas Kvedaravic­ius, who was killed in Ukraine last month — reportedly by Russian forces.

 ?? ?? Russian director Kirill Serebrenni­kov of
Tchaikovsk­y’s Wife.
Russian director Kirill Serebrenni­kov of Tchaikovsk­y’s Wife.

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