Un insegnante russo documenta la trasformazione della sua scuola cittadina in un centro di reclutamento di guerra durante l'invasione dell'Ucraina, rivelando i dilemmi etici che gli educator... Leggi tuttoUn insegnante russo documenta la trasformazione della sua scuola cittadina in un centro di reclutamento di guerra durante l'invasione dell'Ucraina, rivelando i dilemmi etici che gli educatori affrontano tra propaganda e militarizzazione.Un insegnante russo documenta la trasformazione della sua scuola cittadina in un centro di reclutamento di guerra durante l'invasione dell'Ucraina, rivelando i dilemmi etici che gli educatori affrontano tra propaganda e militarizzazione.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 8 vittorie e 7 candidature totali
Viktor Abakumov
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Lavrenti Beria
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Yevhen Konovalets
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Vladimir Putin
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Joseph Stalin
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Pavel Sudoplatov
- Self
- (filmato d'archivio)
Recensioni in evidenza
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Pasha, I just had the pleasure of watching your film at Sundance. It was absolutely incredible! The camera work and film quality were brilliant. Thank you so much for the information that you shared and the risks you took to send it. Thank you for your bravery.
To everyone looking to watch this film please do not hesitate. Regardless of your political position or beliefs I think you will find this movie informative. The pacing is excellent and the movie keeps you on the edge of your seat as you become invested in this tiny town and the hardships that come for its citizens who are being drawn into the war. It's an incredibly relevant and important film.
Thank you again to everyone who worked on this! Well done!
To everyone looking to watch this film please do not hesitate. Regardless of your political position or beliefs I think you will find this movie informative. The pacing is excellent and the movie keeps you on the edge of your seat as you become invested in this tiny town and the hardships that come for its citizens who are being drawn into the war. It's an incredibly relevant and important film.
Thank you again to everyone who worked on this! Well done!
Hi Pasha,
I took my brother to see this today at Sundance (it's his birthday tomorrow and he lived in Eastern Ukraine from 2017-2019) and we were both so intrigued and touched by your film.
One thing that deeply impressed me was the way that you used your talents and position to resist. So often I feel like I don't have power to make a real difference in my community or my country, but your film was such a powerful testament to how we really can by using the tools and gifts at our disposal.
It was also so deeply relevant, not only to the Russia-Ukraine conflict, but also to the propaganda that we see currently in the United States. It was a powerful reminder to me of the active role I need to take at home in trying to seek out truth and share it as well as I can.
Your love and care for Russia, the children in your school, and your community, was evident throughout the film. Sometimes, the greatest form of love and patriotism is dissent, which you've done so courageously here. Despite the horrors you exposed, it was genuinely beautiful and hopeful. Spectacular work. Sending so much warmth and love.
I took my brother to see this today at Sundance (it's his birthday tomorrow and he lived in Eastern Ukraine from 2017-2019) and we were both so intrigued and touched by your film.
One thing that deeply impressed me was the way that you used your talents and position to resist. So often I feel like I don't have power to make a real difference in my community or my country, but your film was such a powerful testament to how we really can by using the tools and gifts at our disposal.
It was also so deeply relevant, not only to the Russia-Ukraine conflict, but also to the propaganda that we see currently in the United States. It was a powerful reminder to me of the active role I need to take at home in trying to seek out truth and share it as well as I can.
Your love and care for Russia, the children in your school, and your community, was evident throughout the film. Sometimes, the greatest form of love and patriotism is dissent, which you've done so courageously here. Despite the horrors you exposed, it was genuinely beautiful and hopeful. Spectacular work. Sending so much warmth and love.
We saw your film at Sundance and it was amazing! The film itself was outstanding, but I am more impressed by your courage and humanity in doing this for the rest of the world. We always think how can one person change things, and usually give up at that point, but the fact is that unless individuals like Pasha stand up, the world will never change. There is a lesson here for Americans under our present regime. The themes of "enemies within" etc. Are all too real. We are hoping your friends in Karabash will be able to see this and take courage from your story. I am also curious about the loyalist history teacher, was there more depth than the party apparatchnik would suggest? Were the tears at the graduation ceremony real?
Thank you!!!!
Don and Deb McClain and Bob and Annette Cooksey.
Thank you!!!!
Don and Deb McClain and Bob and Annette Cooksey.
I saw 'Mr. Nobody Against Putin' at a film festival in early April 2025. Not only did I enjoy the film, especially learning about the fun and brave main character and co-director Pavel "Pasha" Ilyich Talankin, but I got to enjoy a Q&A session and later talk with the other co-director, David Borenstein.
Pasha is from a town of 10,000 in the Ural Mountains of Russia and has a job of organizing events and documenting them and everyday life at a school (K-12?). Things change dramatically when Russia invades Ukraine and schools are asked to give not just scripted patriotic pro-war education, but also are exposed to military education, including marching in uniform, having grenade throwing competitions, and more.
Pasha is a hero; he loves his students who look to him for safe conversations and a space in his video office/classroom. What he does in the face of government militarization of the classroom makes for a fascinating story.
Pasha is from a town of 10,000 in the Ural Mountains of Russia and has a job of organizing events and documenting them and everyday life at a school (K-12?). Things change dramatically when Russia invades Ukraine and schools are asked to give not just scripted patriotic pro-war education, but also are exposed to military education, including marching in uniform, having grenade throwing competitions, and more.
Pasha is a hero; he loves his students who look to him for safe conversations and a space in his video office/classroom. What he does in the face of government militarization of the classroom makes for a fascinating story.
In an age where autocracy tightens its grip and dissenters disappear without a trace, this documentary emerges as a stark and timely reflection on resistance. The film follows an everyman who finds himself inadvertently drawn into a quiet confrontation with one of the world's leaders. The title is evoking Kafkaesque anonymity, and the film's greatest strength is its restraint. There are no grandstanding monologues just the suffocating tension of a man who loves his country, his town, his presence in society, but is against the regime and the war against Ukraine.
Visually, Mr. Nobody Against Putin captures the haunting contradictions of modern Russia. The beauty of a frozen landscape at minus 45 degrees sits uneasily alongside the brutalist remnants of Soviet architecture. There is warmth in the people, their resilience, their humour but also the omnipresence of state control. The film lingers on chilling images: children marching through school corridors, clutching rifles with solemn determination.
The documentary does not offer easy catharsis. It does not promise a hero's victory or a resolution. Instead, it delivers something more unsettling: a creeping awareness that injustice can happen anywhere. To anyone. When they least expect it.
Visually, Mr. Nobody Against Putin captures the haunting contradictions of modern Russia. The beauty of a frozen landscape at minus 45 degrees sits uneasily alongside the brutalist remnants of Soviet architecture. There is warmth in the people, their resilience, their humour but also the omnipresence of state control. The film lingers on chilling images: children marching through school corridors, clutching rifles with solemn determination.
The documentary does not offer easy catharsis. It does not promise a hero's victory or a resolution. Instead, it delivers something more unsettling: a creeping awareness that injustice can happen anywhere. To anyone. When they least expect it.
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- Pan Nikt kontra Putin
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By what name was Mr. Nobody Against Putin (2025) officially released in India in English?
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