Jude Law fearlessly plays Putin role at Venice Film Festival

Jude Law fearlessly plays Putin role at Venice Film Festival

Jude Law and Paul Dano in a scene from The Wizard of the Kremlin. Photo Courtesy: The Guardian

VENICE:

Jude Law said on Sunday he did not fear reprisals for playing Russian President Vladimir Putin in The Wizard of the Kremlin, a new film premiering at the Venice Film Festival that offers a chilling, fictionalised look at Putin's rise to power.

The Wizard of the Kremlin, directed by France's Olivier Assayas and also starring Paul Dano, shows Putin ruthlessly disposing of people who cross his path.

Asked by reporters if he was worried about possible retaliation for taking on the role, Law said: "I hope not naively, but ... I didn't fear repercussions."

The British actor added that the film recounted Putin's single-minded ascendancy "with nuance and consideration. We weren't looking for controversy for controversy's sake".

Based on a best-selling novel by Giuliano da Empoli, the movie imagines the life of Vadim Baranov, a shadowy Kremlin insider who rises from artist to television producer before becoming a spin doctor to a young Putin.

From his office in the Kremlin, he crafts narratives that blur truth and propaganda, faith and manipulation, renouncing his values to serve his master who is determined to restore Russia to greatness after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Scary situation

Law said he shunned a strict impersonation of Putin, but nonetheless tried to capture the essence of the man. "It's amazing what a great wig can do," he joked.

"The tricky side was that the public face (of Putin) that we see gives very little away ... I felt that conflict of trying to show very little, but feel an awful lot and portray an awful lot from within," he said.

Assayas, best known for films such as Carlos (2010) and Personal Shopper (2016), said his latest movie resonated beyond Russia. "We made a movie about what politics has become and the very scary and dangerous situation we all feel we are in," he said.

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