Berliner Boersenzeitung - Oscar-nominated '20 days in Mariupol': from normality to ruins

EUR -
AED 4.241855
AFN 72.754432
ALL 96.085419
AMD 435.786045
ANG 2.067238
AOA 1058.976619
ARS 1584.416613
AUD 1.668657
AWG 2.081577
AZN 1.963562
BAM 1.958501
BBD 2.324366
BDT 141.598951
BGN 1.973957
BHD 0.4371
BIF 3429.837876
BMD 1.154828
BND 1.483084
BOB 7.992229
BRL 6.039519
BSD 1.154021
BTN 108.748324
BWP 15.866361
BYN 3.465669
BYR 22634.620324
BZD 2.321041
CAD 1.59793
CDF 2639.364949
CHF 0.916119
CLF 0.026908
CLP 1062.27995
CNY 7.978876
CNH 7.987226
COP 4265.678972
CRC 535.051764
CUC 1.154828
CUP 30.602931
CVE 110.419186
CZK 24.48783
DJF 205.509637
DKK 7.471699
DOP 69.577759
DZD 153.567517
EGP 60.919445
ERN 17.322414
ETB 178.357225
FJD 2.596341
FKP 0.863621
GBP 0.864129
GEL 3.112263
GGP 0.863621
GHS 12.616672
GIP 0.863621
GMD 84.881166
GNF 10116.864079
GTQ 8.828404
GYD 241.439229
HKD 9.036947
HNL 30.644056
HRK 7.535594
HTG 151.132345
HUF 387.707374
IDR 19533.908305
ILS 3.605952
IMP 0.863621
INR 108.504369
IQD 1511.824159
IRR 1516461.819995
ISK 142.794582
JEP 0.863621
JMD 181.370119
JOD 0.818764
JPY 184.255628
KES 150.011361
KGS 100.990148
KHR 4621.4733
KMF 493.110949
KPW 1039.411558
KRW 1738.569596
KWD 0.354798
KYD 0.961751
KZT 555.968746
LAK 24926.915142
LBP 103344.902703
LKR 362.949956
LRD 211.76754
LSL 19.74324
LTL 3.409906
LVL 0.698544
LYD 7.369162
MAD 10.774645
MDL 20.270569
MGA 4809.737001
MKD 61.728412
MMK 2425.11916
MNT 4138.703025
MOP 9.299606
MRU 46.033882
MUR 53.849906
MVR 17.842152
MWK 2001.120298
MXN 20.502867
MYR 4.612359
MZN 73.795522
NAD 19.74324
NGN 1600.175159
NIO 42.469671
NOK 11.138601
NPR 173.997719
NZD 1.996437
OMR 0.444039
PAB 1.154016
PEN 3.993912
PGK 4.986964
PHP 69.450197
PKR 322.123193
PLN 4.272562
PYG 7553.009814
QAR 4.207018
RON 5.097294
RSD 117.41827
RUB 93.810626
RWF 1685.267852
SAR 4.332547
SBD 9.287166
SCR 15.993858
SDG 694.05154
SEK 10.849022
SGD 1.482671
SHP 0.86642
SLE 28.350504
SLL 24216.169179
SOS 659.529514
SRD 43.377631
STD 23902.59906
STN 24.534472
SVC 10.098101
SYP 128.697299
SZL 19.737732
THB 37.904329
TJS 11.044217
TMT 4.041896
TND 3.39495
TOP 2.780547
TRY 51.230572
TTD 7.833006
TWD 36.827525
TZS 2967.974997
UAH 50.639111
UGX 4293.013226
USD 1.154828
UYU 46.784924
UZS 14056.506376
VES 533.634686
VND 30430.861232
VUV 137.451427
WST 3.175234
XAF 656.877088
XAG 0.016748
XAU 0.000259
XCD 3.12098
XCG 2.079913
XDR 0.814663
XOF 656.87424
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.599659
ZAR 19.643269
ZMK 10394.833581
ZMW 21.667349
ZWL 371.854006
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.08

    -0.17%

  • BCC

    -0.4300

    74.22

    -0.58%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6000

    15.3

    -3.92%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    22.85

    -0.26%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    25.52

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -1.4800

    82.81

    -1.79%

  • RIO

    -1.8600

    85.68

    -2.17%

  • VOD

    0.0550

    14.775

    +0.37%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.63

    -0.22%

  • RELX

    -0.2900

    32.18

    -0.9%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    58.49

    +0.07%

  • GSK

    -0.1350

    54.565

    -0.25%

  • AZN

    -2.7400

    184.4

    -1.49%

  • BP

    1.0390

    46.449

    +2.24%

Oscar-nominated '20 days in Mariupol': from normality to ruins
Oscar-nominated '20 days in Mariupol': from normality to ruins / Photo: STRINGER - AFP/File

Oscar-nominated '20 days in Mariupol': from normality to ruins

Laying out the horrors of the early days of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, documentary "20 days in Mariupol" was on Tuesday nominated for an Oscar.

Text size:

Almost two years on from the start of Russia's attack, the film recounts the dying days of a major city.

"Wars start with silence", filmmaker Mstyslav Chernov says on day one of the 2022 onslaught, as he enters Mariupol by car with his colleague, Associated Press photographer Evgeniy Maloletka.

The journalists, both Ukrainian, know that the southern strategic port will be one of the first targets for Moscow's troops.

Chernov films the last images of a still "normal" city before it was reduced to rubble.

As the shelling begins, the pair encounter a horrified woman asking what she should do.

"They don't shoot civilians," Chernov reassures her, telling the woman to return to her home -- only to add in voice-over: "I was wrong".

Her neighbourhood is bombed soon after and the filmmakers find her again in a gym where hundreds of families are sheltering.

Images of so many men, women and children leave the viewer wondering how many lives will be claimed by the war.

Chernov has a premonition that "something terrible" is coming to Mariupol.

Just three days into their attack, Russian forces began encircling the city, while a quarter of its population had fled.

Those left behind would face carnage.

Chernov said on Tuesday that he hoped the Oscar nomination would bring more people to see the film.

"I feel that I owe the people of Mariupol, and it's my duty to make sure that their stories not forgotten," he said.

- 'Film it! Show it!' -

One week into the war, Chernov and Maloletka are the only international reporters still in Mariupol.

On their perch at the hospital -- one of the only sites enjoying some degree of protection -- they witness the deaths of children and parents' fathomless grief.

Managing to show respect even through the chaos, Chernov films weeping doctors' desperate struggle to save the life of a four-year-old girl, Evangelina.

A father is seen moaning over the dead body of his "beloved son" Ilya, 16, while the parents of 18-month-old Kyrill simply collapse.

"Film it! Show it!" one doctor at the end of his tether urges the cameraman.

The lens captures stretcher-bearers' frantic dashing, people lying in the corridors shaken by bombardment, blood, suffering and nurses taking a brief cigarette break.

"The world has fallen apart and we're smoking," one says with a smile, as if to keep the horror at bay.

Getting their images to the outside world becomes an obsession for the two journalists, even as Mariupol is under siege and cut off.

They encounter wild-eyed people and bodies lying in the street as they step out to search for mobile signal and to film the city's death throes.

People stripped of emotion calmly loot a shop in front of the camera as the owner pleas and a soldier barks for "solidarity".

"The city has changed so fast," Chernov narrates.

As the camera records bodies tossed into mass graves, he adds: "My brain will desperately want to forget all this, but the camera will not let it happen".

"If the world saw everything that happened in Mariupol, it would give at least some meaning to this horror," he hopes.

- Maternity hospital -

On March 9, the war's 14th day, Mariupol's maternity hospital was bombed.

The AP journalists' images of that day have become landmark documents of the war and of atrocities attributed to Russian forces in Ukraine.

When the pair hear Moscow has accused them of staging the pictures with actors, they hunt out the survivors.

But they learn that Iryna, a pregnant woman whose picture on a stretcher was seen worldwide, died with her baby.

They follow the difficult birth of a baby girl to one of the survivors in their quest to get proof out to the world.

In the end, Ukrainian special forces were sent in a high-stakes mission to retrieve the journalists and keep them out of Russian hands as the invaders entered the city.

Leaving Mariupol in a Red Cross convoy, Chernov cannot help but think of those he is "abandoning", whose "tragedies will never be known".

At least 25,000 people died in the 86-day siege of Mariupol, according to authorities in Ukraine, where the fighting remains fierce.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)