Ukrainian president had to endorse Joaquin Phoenix film to end siege

Gunman armed with rifle and grenades released hostages after Volodymyr Zelenskiy consented to his demand


Entertainment Desk July 22, 2020

Recently an armed gunman released 13 hostages and surrendered after Ukrainean president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, consented to his demand of publicly recommending a 2005 animal rights documentary starring Joaquin Phoenix.

It was a good thing he was a film fan, according to the Hollywood Reporter, given the gunman was armed with an automatic rifle and grenades. The stand-off in ended peacefully after Zelenskiy endorsed Earthlings, the obscure documentary narrated by the Oscar winner. The animal rights doc, which won a number of minor festival awards on its initial release, is a scathing critique of humanity's use of animals as pets, food, clothing, entertainment and for scientific research. 

The hostage-taker, identified by local media as 44-year-old Maksym Kryvosh. He was reportedly also an animal rights activist, though he had a prison record, having spent nearly a decade behind bars on fraud and weapons charges, according to reports.

Phoenix is a well-known animal rights activist too, and the actor used his Oscar acceptance speech for Joker to highlight animal rights issue. He recently joined the animal rights doc Gunda as an executive producer and Neon will release the film stateside.

Kryvosh released three hostages after Zelenskiy agreed to endorse the film and surrendered to police after the president posted a video on Facebook telling the Ukraine people: "The film Earthlings from 2005. Everyone should watch it." The video was deleted after Kryvosh surrendered and replaced with a note thanking police and others who helped end the hostage crisis. "Human life is the most important value. We have not lost anyone," Zelenskiy wrote.

The siege began early Tuesday morning when the hostage-taker fired shots and boarded a bus in the city of Lutsk. He told police he had rigged the vehicle with explosives. Police cordoned off the city center and began what would be several hours of intense negotiations. Initially, the hostage-taker had made several other demands, including one that senior politicians in Ukraine state publicly that they were terrorists, reported the outlet.

He has been arrested and "a lengthy prison sentence awaits him," Ukraine interior minister Arsen Avakov told local media. While Avakov condemned the criminal act, he said it should not reflect badly on Earthlings, which he said was "a good film ... you don’t have to be so screwed up and cause such a horror for the whole country – you can watch it without that."

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