{"id":21024,"date":"2025-09-13T11:57:54","date_gmt":"2025-09-13T11:57:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=21024"},"modified":"2025-09-13T11:57:54","modified_gmt":"2025-09-13T11:57:54","slug":"dau-director-ilya-khrzhanovsky-my-pornographic-propaganda-recreating-the-ussr-is-more-important-than-ever-movies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=21024","title":{"rendered":"Dau director Ilya Khrzhanovsky: my \u2018pornographic propaganda\u2019 recreating the USSR is more important than ever | Movies"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\"><span style=\"color:var(--drop-cap);font-weight:700\" class=\"dcr-15rw6c2\">I<\/span>n late July this year, a few days before his 50th birthday, the exiled Russian film-maker Ilya Khrzhanovsky was landed with a 50,000 rouble (\u00a3450) fine by the Presnensky District Court of Moscow. This punishment was ostensibly for a Kafkaesque administrative offence relating to \u201cprocedures for the activities of foreign agents\u201d. Khrzhanovsky himself thinks it was a symbolic birthday warning from the Russian authorities that he is still on their radar.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cIt\u2019s clear it is absolute nonsense,\u201d Khrzhanovsky says. \u201cI will not pay it. I am not a Russian citizen and I don\u2019t want to pay any money to the Russian state.\u201d He renounced his Russian citizenship last year, and is now a British, German and Israeli citizen.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Also last year, Andrei Lugovoi, a former KGB agent turned politician who became deputy chair of the State Duma Committee on Security and Anti-Corruption, called Khrzhanovsky a \u201cmaster traitor\u201d, and accused him of \u201csabotage against Russia\u201d. That\u2019s when Khrzhanovsky was first given the status of \u201cforeign agent\u201d \u2013 a label widely used to target critics of the Putin regime.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dcr-1inf02i\"><\/span><span class=\"dcr-1qvd3m6\">Ilya Khrzhanovsky.<\/span> Photograph: Geoffrey Macnab<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Lugovoi specifically objected to the XZ Foundation that Khrzhanovsky and journalist Mikhail Zygar set up in 2023 to counter propaganda in Russia. Lugovoi didn\u2019t much like Khrzhanovsky\u2019s mocking attitude toward Russia\u2019s \u201cspecial operation\u201d in Ukraine either.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">On the September afternoon that I meet him in the cafe of the tennis club on Venice\u2019s Lido, Lugovoi isn\u2019t much on his mind. He is in town for The Quantum Effect, an exhibition at the San Marco Arts Centre (SMAC) where he is presenting material from his never-ending project Dau. The excerpts he is showing feature scientists debating quantum and string theory.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Khrzhanovsky is relaxed but exudes a certain weary fatalism. You can\u2019t blame him, given the huge debts he has amassed since embarking on Dau, and the widespread opprobrium directed toward the project. It is a series of films \u2013 14 features in all \u2013 art installations, performances, debates and books about Soviet Russia under Stalin that Khrzhanovsky started working on 20 years ago.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">When one of the first films to be unveiled, Dau: Natasha, screened in competition in the Berlin film festival in February 2020, it won an award for its veteran German cinematographer, J\u00fcrgen J\u00fcrges, but generally caused uproar in east and west alike. The film was promptly banned in Russia as \u201cpornographic propaganda\u201d. A grim late scene in which its protagonist Natasha (Natasha Berezhnaya) is being interrogated by a KGB investigator who forces her to insert the neck of a bottle into her vagina provoked particular fury, although the scene was clearly staged. The director was accused of rampant misogyny and bullying.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cIt was published that I found Natasha inside a masochistic brothel, which is absolutely not true \u2013 and then it was translated to Russian,\u201d the director complains, bitterly, about how he and his project have been misrepresented.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dcr-1inf02i\"><\/span><span class=\"dcr-1qvd3m6\">Fury-provoking \u2026 Natasha Berezhnaya in Dau. Natasha. <\/span> Photograph: Phenomen Film<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">It irks him that he was accused of secretly recording his actors in their most intimate moments, including when they were having drunken sex. For one thing, Dau was shot on 35mm \u2013 and you can\u2019t help but notice a 35mm movie camera, especially when there is a big crew standing behind it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The Dau project started in modest fashion, as a small, European-funded arthouse movie inspired by the Nobel prize-winning Soviet scientist Lev Landau (who died in 1968). But somewhere along the way the project \u201cmutated\u201d, as Khrzhanovsky puts it. He secured support from the oligarch Sergei Adoniev and instead of making a feature film, he embarked on what turned into a massive multimedia experiment designed to submerge audiences \u2013 and those who participated in making it \u2013 in the horrific, phantasmagoric world of the Stalin-era Soviet Union.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">He worked with three cinematographers: Lol Crawley (who last year won an Oscar for The Brutalist) shot the Saint Petersburg parts of Dau; then there were J\u00fcrges (best known for his work with Rainer Werner Fassbinder) and Manuel Alberto Claro (who has shot several Lars von Trier films including Nymphomaniac).<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The maverick director largely made the Dau films in Kharkiv in Ukraine, where he built a re-creation of a Soviet-era scientific compound that is claimed to be the largest film set in European cinema history. Rumours suggested he had gone crazy, like Kurtz in Heart of Darkness. He was working with vast armies of actors and extras, artists and scientists (among them Marina Abramovi\u0107 and opera director Peter Sellars), all of whom had to stay entirely in character, as if they really were back in the USSR.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dcr-1inf02i\"><\/span><span class=\"dcr-1qvd3m6\">In character \u2026 artist Marina Abramovi\u0107 in Dau.<\/span> Photograph: TCD\/Prod.DB\/Alamy<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">When he gave a masterclass at the Sarajevo film festival earlier this summer, one detail stood out: the 70 tons of cabbage he requisitioned for a single scene. When I ask why he needed quite so many greens, he responds: \u201cIt\u2019s an unusual project and I did it in an unusual way. I tried to create a feeling of a different time. I tried to find precise faces, precise body language for characters, even in the extras \u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I recognise people from the ex-USSR. There is something about the look in their eyes<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cI recognise people from the ex-USSR. It doesn\u2019t matter how they dress. It\u2019s kind of the Soviet smell. Not literally a smell, but there is something in the body language, something about how people look in the eyes. This was one of the reasons I wanted to try to make this movie, to understand the nature of this Soviet DNA,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">A fateful decision was not to release what he now calls the \u201cmother film\u201d first. This was the conventional, narrative-driven feature that, judging by the trailer, was close to a Doctor Zhivago-style epic, complete with massive crowd scenes.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cI felt that if I came first with this movie, it would take all the attention, and the other Dau movies would be just like leftovers,\u201d he says. Instead, the experimental and confrontational work, in which he goes \u201creally deep in human relations and behaviour\u201d, was shown to the public first, and there was a big Dau exhibition at the Th\u00e9\u00e2tre du Ch\u00e2telet and Th\u00e9\u00e2tre de la Ville in Paris in early 2019.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dcr-1inf02i\"><\/span><span class=\"dcr-1qvd3m6\">\u2018The nature of totalitarianism and the nature of life is that you don\u2019t know\u2019 \u2026 Dau. Degeneration.<\/span> Photograph: Dau<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The timing was against him. Thanks to Covid, distribution opportunities for the first batch of films were severely curtailed. Some were made available on a website (currently under reconstruction) but Dau seemed destined to turn into one of those tantalising projects that would never properly be completed. Back in 2019 and 2020, its grim warnings about the true nature of contemporary Russian totalitarianism were largely ignored. So were the discussions about art, philosophy, religion and quantum physics. Instead, critics focused on the sex and the violence, or grumbled about the teething problems. Visitors to the exhibition in Paris were given \u201cvisas\u201d, not conventional tickets. They had to answer questions about themselves in order to be allowed in. When they looked for guidance from staff about what was showing where, Khrzhanovsky explains, \u201cthe answer they got is that they [the staff] didn\u2019t know \u2013 because the nature of totalitarianism and the nature of life is that you don\u2019t know\u201d. This may have made for heightened Soviet-style realism but it didn\u2019t always contribute to customer satisfaction.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In 2019, the private financing ran out. \u201cThen it was my responsibility,\u201d Khrzhanovsky says. He admits there were times he wanted to abandon the Dau project altogether and \u201cto do something else\u201d. In 2020, he was appointed artistic director of the Babyn Yar memorial centre in Kyiv, commemorating the 34,000 Jews murdered in a ravine in Kyiv by the Nazis in September 1941. He also worked as an associate producer on Sergei Loznitsa\u2019s 2021 film about the massacre, Babyn Yar. Context, and its 2022 follow-up The Kiev Trial.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"dcr-1inf02i\"><\/span><span class=\"dcr-1qvd3m6\">A commemoration \u2026 The Kiev Trial.<\/span> Photograph: Atoms Void<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Then came the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. In the summer of 2023, the director stepped down from the Babyn Yar project; he is now living in Berlin and is picking up the pieces of Dau. He has 700 hours of film, 4,000 hours of sound, enough material to fill 247 books, each 500 pages long, and an estimated 1,500 terabytes of data. He has hired a massive storage space to house the \u201c40,000 pieces of costume, art installations, props and elements that we prepared for the release\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Much of this was previously kept in a huge mansion in Piccadilly owned by property magnates the Reuben brothers. \u201cThe Reubens gave us the building almost for free. I offered our company to be live-in guards. It was a time when they were waiting for planning permission.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Khrzhanovsky is back editing material he shot almost two decades ago \u2013 and he believes that Dau has a new relevance and urgency. \u201cWhen Dau was presented six or seven years ago, there were many questions as to why I was touching this strange story about the Stalin era. At that time, it was not such a big topic. Nowadays, I think it has another meaning. I hope that, through this project, it is possible to understand something more about the nature of totalitarianism. We have to understand where we are, and what kind of huge danger the world is facing now, and that this evil has different faces.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The plan is to release the \u201cmother film\u201d next year. In the meantime, the never-before-seen Dau physics films on show in Venice depict real contemporary scientists \u2013 including the Dutch physicist Erik Verlinde and Nobel prize winner David Gross \u2013 debating quantum theory within the historic conditions of Lev Landau\u2019s Soviet laboratory. This, at least, is one small part of Khrzhanovsky\u2019s gargantuan and hugely contentious project that shouldn\u2019t leave any controversy trailing in its wake.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\"><span data-dcr-style=\"bullet\"\/> The Dau physics films screen as part of The Quantum Effect, an exhibition curated by Daniel Birnbaum and Jacqui Davies, which is at San Marco Art Centre, Venice, until 23 November<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In late July this year, a few days before his 50th birthday, the exiled Russian film-maker Ilya Khrzhanovsky was landed with a 50,000 rouble (\u00a3450) fine by the Presnensky District Court of Moscow. This punishment was ostensibly for a Kafkaesque administrative offence relating to \u201cprocedures for the activities of foreign agents\u201d. Khrzhanovsky himself thinks it<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":21025,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[54],"tags":[12896,2107,12897,8627,12898,1394,12899,11672,8415,12900],"class_list":{"0":"post-21024","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-entertainment","8":"tag-dau","9":"tag-director","10":"tag-ilya","11":"tag-important","12":"tag-khrzhanovsky","13":"tag-movies","14":"tag-pornographic","15":"tag-propaganda","16":"tag-recreating","17":"tag-ussr"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/21024","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=21024"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/21024\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/21025"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=21024"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=21024"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=21024"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}