RT.com
02 Apr 2025, 14:40 GMT+10
Docville has dropped the documentary showing Russian soldiers perspectives after objections from the Ukrainian Embassy
The Docville documentary film festival in Belgium has canceled its screening of 'Russians at War' after a formal request from the Ukrainian Embassy.
The festival said it made the decision "out of immense respect for the Ukrainian people." However, it also defended its original choice to include the film, saying it aimed "to offer a platform to very different voices that often do not find their way into the mainstream."
The documentary, filmed by director Anastasia Trofimova with Canadian government funding, follows Russian soldiers in the Lugansk and Donetsk People's Republics. The former Ukrainian regions joined Russia after referendums in 2022.
Shot over seven months in 2023, the film features interviews with fighters and explores their personal experiences. Trofimova has said she aimed to present Russian troops in a way that differs from typical portrayals. "I think it's important to tell this side of the story because there's almost nothing from this side of the story," she stated in an interview with Canadian magazine POV last year.
The film has drawn criticism in the West, where some claim it is soft on the Russian military. In 2024 Trofimova was listed on the notorious Ukrainian state-linked Mirotvorets (Peacemaker) database for "Russian propaganda." The controversial database lists individuals who supposedly pose a threat to Ukrainian national security, and has been branded a 'kill list' due to the number of people featured on it who have died under suspicious circumstances.
In a statement, the Docville festival said it was "very difficult in times of disinformation and propaganda to gain insight into the story of Russian soldiers."
'Russians at War' was previously screened in the non-competitive section of the Venice Film Festival. The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) has also planned a screening in September, but suspended it citing safety concerns after protests from Ukrainian groups.
It is the second film Docville has withdrawn from its program, following the earlier removal of 'Not In My Country, Serbia's Lithium Dilemma'. The documentary explored protests against a proposed lithium mine in Serbia, which President Aleksandar Vucic claimed was a plot against the government along the lines of the 2013-14 Western-backed coup in Kiev.
Docville said on its website it could no longer "guarantee the serenity of the screening and the debate." Docville's director, Frank Moens, called the situation unprecedented, saying that in the festival's 21-year history, they had never had to withdraw a film.
(RT.com)
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