‘Leviathan’ divides Russia over monstering corrupt officials
Andrei Zvyagintsev’s film casts Russian Orthodox Church in dubious light.
MOSCOW:
Director Andrei Zvyagintsev, whose bleak depiction of his homeland in the Oscar-nominated film Leviathan divided Russia, said on Wednesday that the polarisation proved his movie had “touched something very important.”
The Golden Globe-winning film exposes some of the country’s modern taboos, portraying the doomed struggle of a man in Russia’s far North against a greedy and corrupt local mayor, while casting the Russian Orthodox Church in a dubious light. “The audience, the country was split over it,” said Zvyagintsev at a news conference to promote the Russian screening of the film, which will be heavily censored due to new obscenity laws.
“It should have been understood that the public would be polarised, but the extreme points-of-view over the film show it was a success,” he said. “It touched something very important.” Russian fans of the film say the story mirrors life in Russia in the 15 years since President Vladimir Putin first rose to power, with corrupt state officials enriching themselves with impunity at the expense of ordinary people.
Interestingly, some of the harshest criticism came from the Culture Ministry, which co-financed the film. Minister Vladimir Medinsky accused Zvyagintsev of blackening Russia’s image to gain Western praise. “Films focused not only on criticism of current authorities but openly spitting on them... (Films) filled with a sense of despair and hopelessness over our existence should not be financed with taxpayers’ money,” Medinsky said in a newspaper interview, when asked whether the ministry would support similar films in the future.
Zvyagintsev said the 19th-century novel Crime and Punishment also faced street protests when parts were first published, but was at pains to say he was not drawing parallels between himself and the great Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky.
Leviathan, largely shot in the village of Teriberka on the Barents Sea, was premiered in mid-2014, but cinemas in Russia will start screening it in February.
Russian newspaper Izvestia quoted a Russian Orthodox activist calling for the film, which shows dubious cooperation between the mayor and local clergy, not to be shown in Russia because it vilified the Russian Orthodox Church.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 30th, 2015.
Director Andrei Zvyagintsev, whose bleak depiction of his homeland in the Oscar-nominated film Leviathan divided Russia, said on Wednesday that the polarisation proved his movie had “touched something very important.”
The Golden Globe-winning film exposes some of the country’s modern taboos, portraying the doomed struggle of a man in Russia’s far North against a greedy and corrupt local mayor, while casting the Russian Orthodox Church in a dubious light. “The audience, the country was split over it,” said Zvyagintsev at a news conference to promote the Russian screening of the film, which will be heavily censored due to new obscenity laws.
“It should have been understood that the public would be polarised, but the extreme points-of-view over the film show it was a success,” he said. “It touched something very important.” Russian fans of the film say the story mirrors life in Russia in the 15 years since President Vladimir Putin first rose to power, with corrupt state officials enriching themselves with impunity at the expense of ordinary people.
Interestingly, some of the harshest criticism came from the Culture Ministry, which co-financed the film. Minister Vladimir Medinsky accused Zvyagintsev of blackening Russia’s image to gain Western praise. “Films focused not only on criticism of current authorities but openly spitting on them... (Films) filled with a sense of despair and hopelessness over our existence should not be financed with taxpayers’ money,” Medinsky said in a newspaper interview, when asked whether the ministry would support similar films in the future.
Zvyagintsev said the 19th-century novel Crime and Punishment also faced street protests when parts were first published, but was at pains to say he was not drawing parallels between himself and the great Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky.
Leviathan, largely shot in the village of Teriberka on the Barents Sea, was premiered in mid-2014, but cinemas in Russia will start screening it in February.
Russian newspaper Izvestia quoted a Russian Orthodox activist calling for the film, which shows dubious cooperation between the mayor and local clergy, not to be shown in Russia because it vilified the Russian Orthodox Church.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 30th, 2015.