TIFF 2024: Protesters blast 'Russia at War,' director defends it as
'antiwar film'
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[September 11, 2024]
By Wa Lone
TORONTO (Reuters) - Ukrainian diplomats and activists in Canada on
Tuesday urged the Toronto International Film Festival to cancel further
screenings of a documentary portraying Russian soldiers fighting in
Ukraine, claiming the film serves as “Russian propaganda.”
"Russians At War" was filmed by Anastasia Trofimova, a Russian-Canadian
director and cinematographer who spent seven months embedded with
Russian troops near the front line in Ukraine.
The documentary is a raw and visceral look at the war from the
unfiltered perspective of soldiers fighting on the ground. They speak
directly to the camera about fear, death and hope as the war rages
around them.
Ukrainian Consul General Oleh Nikolenko said the documentary was an
attempt to white-wash war crimes committed by the Russian military since
its invasion of Ukraine began in 2022.
"This is highly crafted Russian propaganda and unfortunately the
festival has not demonstrated any willingness to address our concerns,"
he said in an interview, referring to TIFF's decision to allow the
screening.
Trofimova denied that her documentary was propaganda. On the contrary,
she said, it was filmed without permission of the Russian government,
putting her at risk of criminal prosecution in Russia.
"I want to be clear that this Canada-France co-production is an antiwar
film made at great risk to all involved, myself especially," she said in
a written statement.
"I unequivocally believe that Russia's invasion of Ukraine is
unjustified, illegal and acknowledge the validity of the International
Criminal Court investigation of war crimes in Ukraine," she wrote.
"Russians at War" was funded by the not-for-profit Canada Media Fund,
supported in part through government grants, according to a TIFF media
statement. It made its North American premiere at the festival after
showing out of competition at the Venice Film Festival this month.
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Protesters gather outside the Toronto International Film Festival
(TIFF) screening of 'Russians at War', a documentary about Russian
troops fighting in Ukraine, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada September
10, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio
Canadian Deputy Prime Minister
Chrystia Freeland, herself of Ukrainian descent, also condemned the
film and its inclusion in TIFF's program. At a Liberal Party retreat
in British Columbia, she told reporters that Ukrainian diplomats and
the Ukrainian-Canadian community have expressed grave concerns about
it.
"It's not right for Canadian public money to be supporting the
screening and production of a film like this,” she said.
"We have to be really clear that this is a war where there is no
moral equivalency. This is a war of Russian aggression."
TIFF officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Outside a Toronto theatre on Tuesday, dozens of protesters gathered
to decry the festival's decision to not comply with demands to
cancel the documentary's screenings.
Olya Glotka, a Ukrainian-Canadian filmmaker who helped organize the
protest, told Reuters that the Canadian government should
investigate the funding of the film.
"This is not the right time to give voice to people who are daily
committing war crimes, killing civilians and abducting children,"
she said.
(Reporting by Wa Lone in Toronto; Editing by Frank McGurty and Bill
Berkrot)
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