Since Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022, Ukrainian intelligence has recorded hundreds of personal telephone calls made by Russian troopers to family and friends again dwelling. Within the new documentary Intercepted (2024), director Oksana Karpovych pairs these conversations with photos of post-battle scenes round Ukraine. The movie is a feature-length research within the tensely liminal interludes of struggle, when mundane conditions are scarred by current violence and haunted by the potential for extra violence to come back.
The movie travels in a roughly clockwise geographic arc throughout its operating time, starting with scenes shot north of Kyiv earlier than shifting south and east, typically edging near fight zones — typically filming proper after combating — and concluding in Kharkiv not lengthy after Russian forces had been pushed out of town. The Russian telephone calls are public info, launched by Ukrainian authorities since early within the struggle. Karpovych combed by round 30 hours of audio for the clips used within the film.
Intercepted posits a twinned dialectic between sound and picture and between invader and invaded. Ukrainians are represented by what’s seen, Russians by what is alleged. The tableaus are almost at all times lengthy, nonetheless takes, apart from some panning pictures, and normally don’t function human figures. There’s a recurrent motif of curtains blowing in in any other case static scenes — blasted-out kitchens, school rooms, and dwelling rooms in eerie post-traumatic repose. And there may be typically an ironic counterpoint between the telephone calls and the scenes they overlay. In a single shot, as an illustration, a person smokes in a kitchen and easily stares out the window, performing some of the mundane acts one can consider. Within the overlaid audio, nonetheless, a Russian soldier claims to the lady he’s calling (almost certainly his mom) that at any time when he and his squad mates tough up Ukrainian civilians, they don’t categorical any ache, dehumanizing them.
References to homicide, rape, and myriad different doable struggle crimes are rife all through the telephone calls. That these males are largely speaking to members of the family, and virtually at all times feminine ones — moms, wives, girlfriends — makes for a disquieting glimpse into the synchronicity between army monstrosity and the civilian society that it grows out of. The troopers are likely to obtain light understanding, if not outright approval, from their callers. A shelling will be referenced as casually because the climate.
The movie’s emphasis on Russian depravity within the calls it makes use of is matched with people who converse to the toughness of Ukrainian troopers and civilians. Within the aforementioned scene of a person smoking, the lady speaking to the soldier says that their opponents are “even harder than the fascists had been,” referring to World Struggle II. The propagandistic aspect is unmistakable. One shot presents a half-ruined constructing that nonetheless flies a number of unblemished Ukrainian flags, a readymade image of nationwide defiance towards invasion. A lot of Intercepted contains equally blunt messaging — comprehensible, given the stark state of affairs of struggle. In its imagining, on the charred border between nations at struggle, atrocity actually whispers within the air.
Intercepted (2024), directed by Oksana Karpovych, is screening at Movie Discussion board by October 10.