Entertainment

Ukraine in Focus at Toronto Film Festival

More than 18 months into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, documentary filmmakers who screened their latest work on the conflict at the Toronto film festival say it is more important than ever to keep the crisis in the public consciousness.

Oscar-nominated Egyptian director Karim Amer debuted his “Defiant,” which tells the story of the first year of the war from the perspective of Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and other top Ukrainian officials.

Polish filmmaker Maciek Hamela meanwhile took a different approach with “In the Rearview,” filming his own perilous road journeys to help evacuate Ukrainian civilians during the first few months of fighting in 2022.

From the United Nations to the White House, Amer follows Kuleba as he urges the West to back Kyiv to the fullest extent possible in the face of Russian firepower.

The film also focuses on Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine’s minister of digital transformation, whose original remit to put all public services online morphs into an all-out cyberwar effort backed by a massive “IT army” of volunteer hackers.

“We didn’t fully understand what the story would be, but we knew we wanted it to be character-focused, based on things that the government was doing in its communication to the world,” Amer, 39, told AFP ahead of the premiere.

Amer, who produced Oscar nominee “The Square” about events in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in 2011, said his team for “Defiant” focused on making a film “about the war as it relates to the world,” not one featuring battle footage or civilian suffering.

“There are other frontlines that we felt are equally important in a war, and that these frontlines are oftentimes invisible,” Amer said. “The people we followed had in many ways invented a new playbook in real time, inadvertently.”

At the outset of the film, Kuleba has met with US President Joe Biden, who he says appeared to be “bidding farewell to the entire Ukrainian nation.”

A year on, Biden now believes Ukraine can defeat Russia — a shift Kuleba believes is due in part to his globetrotting diplomatic efforts.

The film’s producer Odessa Rae, who won an Oscar last year for her documentary “Navalny” about jailed Russian dissident Alexei Navalny, said Moscow was offered the opportunity to participate in the project, but those requests went unanswered.

“This is the most extraordinary political event since World War II,” Amer said. “What’s happening in Ukraine affects everyone on this planet even though it’s not talked about that way.”

As Kuleba says into the camera, “No one will be able to sit out this crisis.”

– ‘More intimate’ side of war –

With “In the Rearview,” which has screened at multiple festivals including Cannes since May but got its North American debut on Tuesday in Toronto, Hamela offers an intimate look at the suffering of ordinary people who board his van, headed for an uncertain future.

“I’m a filmmaker, but I stopped shooting films and doing any kind of work to drive. And I was focused only on driving,” the 40-year-old told AFP.

“People got to know that I was doing it, so they would call me, you know, asking me to bring out families of their friends, or friends of friends,” he added, estimating he made about 100 journeys over a period of six months, with some breaks to rest.

Once he decided to turn the camera on his passengers, the horrors of war played out in confessional-style interviews in Hamela’s rearview mirror — rape, torture, displacement, death, loss — against a backdrop of bombed-out bridges and homes.

“The first interrogation was tough. After that, you get used to it,” one male passenger said. Another woman described living for a month in a basement in Mariupol, the port city captured by Russia after a long and brutal siege in 2022.

Hamela said he hoped his film would “first of all remind everybody that this war is still ongoing,” but also show “an aspect of the war which is much more intimate,” which could help viewers relate to everyday Ukrainians on a human level.

“It’s important to make documentaries about all conflicts that raise awareness about the current state of the world we’re living in,” he added, citing the situations in Afghanistan, Sudan, Syria and Yemen as fueling a global refugee crisis.

(AFP)

Follow us on:

AriseNews

View Comments

  • GOIF3 ₦400, 000
    GOIF4 ₦500,000
    Toyota Camry Tiny Light ₦550,000
    Toyota Corolla ₦600,000.
    Toyota 4Runner ₦850,000
    Toyota Avalon ₦700,000
    Toyota Highlander ₦900,000
    Toyota Matrix #700,000
    Toyota Rav4 ₦780,000
    Toyota Sequoia ₦900,000
    Toyota Tacoma ₦1.2M
    Toyota Tundra ₦1.8M
    Toyota Yaris ₦650,000
    Honda Baby Boy ₦550,000
    Honda Accord EOD ₦600,000
    Honda City ₦550,000
    Honda Crosstour ₦2.6M
    Honda CR-V ₦800,000.
    Honda Odyssey ₦650,000
    Honda Pilot ₦950,000
    Lexus RX300 ₦1.4Million
    Lexus RX330 ₦1.7Million
    Lexus RX350 ₦2.4Million
    Land Rover Discovery ₦3.2Million
    Land Rover Freelander ₦3.6Million
    Land Range Rover Sport ₦2Million
    Range Rover evogue 3.0m
    Acura MDX ₦1.8Million
    Audi A4 ₦500,000
    Audi A6 ₦700,000
    BMW 3-Series ₦1.3Million
    BMW 5-Series ₦1.6Million
    BMW X5 ₦1.8Million
    BMW X6 ₦2.3Million
    Infiniti FX35 ₦1.9Million
    Infiniti FX45 ₦2.6Million
    Infiniti QX4 ₦2.1Million
    Mazda 626 ₦600,000
    Mazda MPV ₦640,000
    Mercedes-Benz C-Class ₦1.3Million
    Mercedes-Benz E-Class ₦1.8Million
    Mercedes-Benz GLK ₦3.Million
    Mercedes-Benxz ML320 ₦1Million
    Mercedes-Benz ML350 ₦3Million
    Nissan Altima ₦1.4Million
    Nissan Armanda ₦1.9Million
    Nissan Maxima ₦2.1Million.......O91 5608 9111

Recent Posts

Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour: Commercialisation Of GMO Seeds Can Take Away Nigeria’s Food Sovereignty, Cause Health Issues

Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour has condemned the commercialisation of GMO seeds, warning of threats to Nigeria’s food…

21 minutes ago

Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour: Commercialisation Of GMO Seeds Can Take Away Nigeria’s Food Sovereignty, Cause Health Issues

Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour has condemned the commercialisation of GMO seeds, warning of threats to Nigeria’s food…

1 hour ago

Usyk Defeats Fury on Points in Riyadh to Retain Heavyweight Championship Title

Oleksandr Usyk has secured victory over Tyson Fury in Riyadh, successfully defending his heavyweight championship…

6 hours ago

Albania to Ban TikTok for a Year After Schoolboy’s Death Sparks Concerns

Albania plans a one-year TikTok ban from January after a schoolboy’s death sparks concerns over…

8 hours ago

Suspect Remanded in Custody Over Deadly Attack at German Christmas Market

A suspect accused of killing five people by driving into a crowded Christmas market in…

9 hours ago

US Fighter Jet ShotDown in Red Sea ‘Friendly Fire’ Incident Amid Heightened Tensions

A US Navy F/A-18 Hornet was mistakenly shot down over the Red Sea by the…

9 hours ago