3500+ Films - 2.5 million words – 1 million viewers! Founder and Curator Carmela selects some of our most powerful films about Russia at We Are Moving Stories including the films of actor/writer Margarita Zhitnikova and short drama and features about Russian women and by Russian women directors; the past; Ukraine and Chechnya.
Total length of this section: 22 films.
<THE FILMS OF ACTOR/WRITER MARGARITA ZHITNIKOVA>
2 Weeks - When 20-something-year-old Tanya begins to realize she’s asexual, the highly charged sexualized world she lives in as an actress and partner begins to fall apart and feels more and more like an unbearable nightmare. Length: 8.05 minutes. Writer Margarita Zhitnikova:
Jones - Aware that her drinking has become destructive, Jones takes a go at living the sober life. Not wanting to be someone else’s problem, she pushes away help and comes face to face with herself and her lack of control. Length: 8 minutes 32 seconds. Director Stacey Maltin:
<RUSSIAN WOMEN>
Little Potato - Struggling to survive in the USSR during the turbulent years of Perestroika, Elena and her young gay son escape into the world of pirated American movies. But soon the movies are not enough and Elena decides to become a mail-order-bride and discover America for herself. Length: 14 minutes. Producer Mischa Jakupcak and Mel Eslyn:
Son Of Sofia - Athens, 2004 summer Olympic Games. 11-year-old Misha arrives from Russia to live with his mother, Sofia. What he doesn’t know is that there is a father waiting for him there. Length: 111 minutes. Length: 54 minutes. Writer/Director Elina Psykou:
Elina - is a period drama that follows the principal ballerina of a Russian dance company, on tour in 1960s America, who is trying to decide whether or not to defect. Length: 12 minutes. Director Maria Forsythe:
Échappé - While on tour in 1970, a Soviet ballerina learns of her brother’s plan to defect. Length: 12 minutes 48 seconds. Writer/Director Allison Mattox:
Odd One Out - A Russian mother and her queer son try to cope with their new situation, as the son, a political activist and radical artist, applies for political asylum in Europe. Length: 54 minutes. Writer/Director Reetta Aalto:
Hostage - Alex steals a car from a Parisian suburb. To his surprise, in the back seat there’s Lola, a 10 year-old Russian girl. Alex finds it difficult to get rid of Lola because she outsmarts him every time and thus the hunter becomes the prey. Length: 14 minutes. Director: Laura Melange:
The Last Empress of Fashion - True life story of a woman who was born into a poor family but built a $100M fashion empire in 1/6 of the world, fought stage 3 cancer, survived the KGB plot to jail and kill her, fled to Italy with the help of a KGB spy and finally was elected as an ambassador of Made In Italy. Length: 90 minutes. Director/Executive Producer Gala Pawl:
<RUSSIAN WOMEN DIRECTORS>
God does exist, or Where Do Babies Come From - USSR, 1990s. Two little school girls are about to be accepted into The Pioneers. And exactly then they found the Kama-Sutra and realized that grownups lied to them about where babies come from. But Soviet Pioneer are honest people! And so the girls decide to act. Length: 10 minutes. Director/Producer Guzel Sultanova:
Beware of Dog - Three young adults experience parallel struggles with mental health and identity. In Moscow, a woman struggles with severe OCD, while her cousin in Berlin tries to build a romantic relationship ignoring her own bipolar disorder. Meanwhile, in New York City, a heartbroken boxer faces addiction and lack of self-worth in the aftermath of a break-up. Length: 1 hour 24 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Nadia Bedzhanova:
Heroines - A young girl with blooming awareness, Nina, interacts with her crass neighbor who explains the tangled world of intimacy and love. Drawing from her own experiences, Nina understands more than she thought. Length: 7 minutes. Director Katia Badalian:
Beyond This Moment - A mother of two kids putting them to sleep before going to bed as well. She dreams of herself dancing and making art with her body. She is woken up by her kids and realizes it was just a dream. But one of the children sees a paint stain on her neck. She ran to her little garage studio and seeing a big fresh painted canvas hanging on the wall: was it just a dream or reality? Length: 8 minutes 50 seconds. Director/Actor Alyona Amato and Producer Erika Edwards:
Solo - 6 styles. 6 stories. One main protagonist: Dance. Length: 1 hour 26minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Ola Pankratova:
The Lightest Darkness - When a neurotic private eye who struggles to finish the case takes a train voyage, his own dark secrets begin to reveal themselves. Length: 65-70 minutes. Director Diana Galimzyanova:
Solo - Only on stage does an old actor realize that he is ironically living the same tragic life of his character "Firs," from “The Cherry Orchard” by Anton Chekhov. Length: 18 minutes 55 seconds. Writer/Director Anya Elnikova:
Life is Art - Even when the human soul is bound by the Russian regime it finds a way to transcend boundaries through the creation of art and connects the lives of those that view it. Length: 44 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Oksana Sokol:
<THE PAST>
Roadside Radiation. Strahlen der Heimat - With stories from the Chernobyl zone of alienation, ROADSIDE RADIATION portrays the fates of its past and present residents and researches the complex human consequences of the catastrophe: a place of collective loss but also of individual survival. Length: 55 minutes. Interview with Director Moritz Schulz and Producer Michael Sladek:
<UKRAINE>
Breaking Point: The War for Democracy in Ukraine - The film is an intimate look at the war and revolution in Ukraine through the eyes of ordinary people who risked their lives to create a more democratic, independent country. Their lives were transformed by the tumultuous revolution on the Maidan, the Russian annexation of Crimea and war in eastern Ukraine that has killed over 10,000 people and left 1.9 million refugees. Length: 98 minutes. Writer/Director Mark Jonathan Harris:
Freedom or Death! - American filmmaker Damian Kolodiy travels to Kyiv, Ukraine to document the brutal 2014 insurrection from the streets, as the people of Ukraine spontaneously rise up against their corrupt and oppressive government, going to war in the pursuit of a better future. Length: 75 minutes. Director/Producer Damian Kolodiy:
<CHECHNYA>
HotDocs / DocPlanet Warsaw 2019 – Daymohk - A film about the Chechen dance group. Length: 1 hour 25 minutes. Director Masha Novikova:
Bound - An oppressed gay man transcends the horrors of his reality. His acceptance of who he is, his resilience and the love he’s experienced empowers him to resist his oppressors. Length: 3 minutes. Oli Cohen, Nicolas Blanco: