The Guardian (USA)

Butterfly Vision review – grim drama about Ukrainian prisoners of the Donbas war

- Cath Clarke

Ukrainian film-maker Maksym Nakonechny­i finished war drama Butterfly Vision last February, just days before the Russian invasion. His film tells a fictional story about a shellshock­ed female Ukrainian soldier held prisoner for two months by Russian-backed separatist­s in Donbas during the conflict that began in 2014. It’s a tough, unsparing movie, and possibly not the Ukrainian film that anyone wants to watch right now as the country fights for survival. Nakonechny­i’s reflective script, co-written with Iryna Tsilyk, doesn’t have Russia in its crosshairs; instead there are some inconvenie­ntly downbeat insights into the divided attitudes the soldier faces when she returns home.

The soldier’s name is Lilya (Rita Burkovska), nicknamed “Butterfly”, an aerial reconnaiss­ance expert who is released in a prisoner swap. We watch her reunion with her family in the format of a news bulletin, with the emojis and comments of online viewers flashing across the screen. One is an OMG about

Lilya’s bedraggled appearance: “What happened to her gorgeous hair?” Others are more sympatheti­c: “It’s hard to imagine what she’s been through.”

The thing is that nobody actually wants to know what Lilya has been through. There are deep scars carved into her back. We find out she was raped by her Russian guard; now she’s pregnant. The army investigat­or doesn’t ask if she was sexually assaulted (even though it was a wellknown tactic and amounts to a war crime). It’s the same with her family. They know Lilya was tortured – horrifying­ly, her mum talks about getting calls from the separatist­s on Lilya’s mobile, with her daughter’s screams in the background. But it’s just not a topic of conversati­on. Meanwhile, Lilya’s husband has joined a far-right vigilante group that attacks a Roma community. And one scene on a bus feels painful, in the real-life context of a year of hell, of Ukrainian nationalis­m, pride and patriotism: the driver refuses to accept Lilya’s veteran’s free travel card. The passengers mostly back him up; “It’s not my war,” one shouts.

Butterfly Vision is Nakonechny­i’s feature debut; he has previously worked on documentar­ies about the conflict, which might explain the texture of truth here, his film’s grim believabil­ity. Though she might have turned the dial up, Burkovska conveys Lilya’s depression and anxiety, and finally her resilience, with a muted, powerful performanc­e. This might be one to file away for the future, when the current conflict has ended.

• Butterfly Vision is available from Wednesday on Mubi.

 ?? Shellshock­ed … Rita Burkovska in Butterfly Vision ??
Shellshock­ed … Rita Burkovska in Butterfly Vision

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