Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ukraine, Georgia fuming over planned Russian sex film

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ukraine, Georgia fuming over planned Russian sex film

    Ukraine, Georgia fuming over planned Russian sex film
    By GRAEME SMITH

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    Aug 15 2005

    MOSCOW -- Alexei Mitrofanov, deputy leader of Russia's Liberal
    Democratic Party, says he cannot understand the ruckus over his
    dirty movie.

    What's so wrong, he asks, about writing a film script that imagines
    a steamy rendezvous between a buxom woman named Yulia and a darkly
    handsome gentleman named Mikhail?

    What does it matter if the porn star selected for the role of Yulia
    wears the same braided hairstyle as Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia
    Tymoshenko? Or that she climbs into a Russian attack helicopter,
    zooms over the mountains along Georgia's northern border and makes
    love to someone who resembles Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili?

    "How can they react like this when they haven't even seen the film?"
    said Mr. Mitrofanov, a senior member of the State Duma, or lower
    parliament, better-known for his extreme nationalist politics than
    his prowess as an author of sex films.

    Ukraine and Georgia have voiced displeasure with Mr. Mitrofanov's
    side project, which is scheduled to start filming next week.

    Rumours are circulating about possible retaliation by Ukrainian
    filmmakers, who are reportedly trying to cast a male porn star who
    resembles Russian President Vladimir Putin for a gay film.

    It's the latest, and most bizarre, sign of tensions between Russia
    and the two former Soviet republics, which have drifted away from
    Moscow's influence after recent revolutions in both countries.
    Ukraine squabbled with Russia over energy prices, while Georgia
    demanded the closing of Russian military bases on its soil.

    Despite the recent history, Mr. Mitrofanov seems hopeful that his
    26-minute sex film, titled Yulia, will take foreign relations to new
    heights -- literally and figuratively.

    "Political erotics are a new genre that I have discovered," he said.
    "The film is about politics. It makes a political statement, they
    don't just [have sex]."

    The politician was vague about the film's message, but he dismissed
    any suggestion that he was trying to demean Mr. Saakashvili, 37, who
    will be played by an unnamed Armenian actor, or Ms. Tymoshenko, 44,
    whose role has been taken by a well-known porn actress, Elena Berkova.

    Russian audiences are already intimately familiar with Ms. Berkova,
    who gained celebrity on the popular Dom-2 reality television show.
    She initially described herself as the 20-year-old director of a
    marriage agency, but was kicked off the show after revelations about
    her career as an adult-film star.

    Ms. Berkova has reinvented herself as a musician, with a recording
    scheduled for release in the fall. Her producer, Alexander Valov,
    acknowledges that she signed on to Mr. Mitrofanov's project to generate
    publicity for the album.

    It's still unclear whether Ms. Berkova intends to reprise her hard-core
    performances in the film; the politician has pushed for more graphic
    scenes, while Ms. Berkova's producer hopes for fewer. The film isn't
    intended for theatres in any case, with distribution directly to DVD,
    video, the Internet and possibly television.

    A Black Shark helicopter will be rented for the filming, Mr. Valov
    said. The modern Russian attack helicopter is armoured against
    12.7-millimetre bullets, which could be useful if Mr. Valov follows
    through on his intention to film the climactic love scene in the
    air above the Pankisi Gorge, an area still racked by battles between
    Chechen fighters and Russian security forces.

    "You could be shot down by a rocket any time you cross that border, and
    this increases the thrill during the moment of sex," Mr. Valov said.

    Temuri Grigalashvili, a spokesman for the Georgian President, wasn't
    particularly thrilled by the idea. "This is a cheap public-relations
    trick," he said.

    "One should not do such things," said Nikolai Novosad, the first
    secretary of the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow. "A state politician
    cannot talk about another one in such a way."

    Mr. Mitrofanov rejected the idea that he's creating propaganda.

    "Is the film The Interpreter propaganda or big cinema?" he said. "Is
    the film JFK propaganda or big cinema? Why is it that in America
    these films are considered big cinema but films like this in Russia
    are considered propaganda? This is big cinema and I am a great master."
Working...
X