Dimitri Venkov’s Krisis is based on a Facebook discussion on December 8, 2013, the day on which pro-European demonstrators in Kiev started to demolish statues of Vladimir Lenin. The film reenacts debates between Russian and Ukrainian artists during the protests, revealing deep aesthetic, historical, and political divisions.
Andrey Rogozhin
Lead Liberal
Liudmila Khallilulina
Hysterical Leftist
Maria Kresina
Liberal
Anton Fedorov
Cheeky Leftist
Anton Figurovsky
Patriotic Liberal
Sergey Gilev
Subtle Leftist
Ekaterina Alikina
Compassionate Liberal
Alexandr Shugarov
Evgeny Kozlov
Pensive meditator
Dmitry Sarancha
Quiet Leftist
Anton Bebin
Troll
Yulia Chepurnova
Reasonable Leftist
Director, Adaptation
Dimitri Venkov
Screenplay
Gleb Napreenko
Screenplay
German Vinogradov
Screenplay
Sergei Mironenko
Screenplay
Lola Kantor
Screenplay
Elena Gonsalez
Screenplay
Alexei Dushkin
Screenplay
Nikita Kadan
Screenplay
Andrei Parshchikov
Screenplay
Artem Langenburg
Screenplay
Vladimir Mironenko
Screenplay
Natalia Abalakova
Story
Yury Albert
June 12, 2023
10
Gleb Napreenko for Documenta 14
Dimitri Venkov’s Krisis is based on a Facebook discussion on December 8, 2013, the day that “Leninopad,” the widespread demolition of monuments to Vladimir Lenin, kicked off in Ukraine. The first monument to be dismantled in Kyiv was made by Soviet sculptor Sergei Merkurov and was erected in 1946, while Stalin was still in power. The Ukrainian ultra-nationalist party Svoboda (Freedom) claimed responsibility.
The monument was demolished during the Euromaidan, popular protests against the regime of President Viktor Yanukovych. Yanukovych had rejected EU integration and thrown his lot in with Vladimir Putin, thus maintaining his country’s dependence on the Russian Federation. Police loyal to Yanukovych attempted to disperse the Euromaidan—made up of liberal, right-wing, and leftist groups—several times. But shortly before the monument’s demolition, ultra-right-wingers tried to expel leftist activists from the Euromaidan for their alleged communist sympathies.
The Euromaidan led to regime change in Ukraine. Yanukovych fled to Russia, and parliamentary and presidential elections were held. Ukraine has now adopted a “decommunization” law, a policy of dismantling symbols of the Soviet period. The country’s economy is in poor shape.
Venkov considers the role played in politics by the insoluble and inexplicable, by things that spark controversy, arguments, and suspicion, but remain opaque. The historical complexity surrounding the demolition of the Lenin monuments is manifested in two mediations of the event, in two gaps. The first lies between the event in Kyiv and the people writing on Facebook, mostly Russian citizens outside Ukraine. The second emerges between the Facebook discussion and its staging onscreen, reminiscent of a classicist drama. The film unfolds between these gaps like an endless court case, with no possibility of a unanimous verdict.