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MovieReview: Exploding Prejudice: "Sapyory" Is A War Story Of Partis

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  • MovieReview: Exploding Prejudice: "Sapyory" Is A War Story Of Partis

    EXPLODING PREJUDICE: "SAPYORY" IS A WAR STORY OF PARTISANS FIGHTING NAZI OCCUPIERS.
    By Alexander Bratersky

    The Moscow Times
    June 6 2008
    Russia

    The plot of "Sapyory," or "Sappers," sounds just like any other
    Russian-made World War II movie: A small band of partisans sets out
    to try to save Soviet soldiers captured by the Nazis. But in a genre
    often used to promote patriotic feelings, the choice of an Armenian
    protagonist as a partisan commander, played by an Armenian actor,
    is perhaps unusual.

    "I was very surprised when I was selected for the role," said Sayat
    Abadzhyan in an interview last week. "I liked that it was a war hero,
    not some gangster or crook."

    In the Soviet period it seemed natural for filmmakers to show
    the contributions of all ethnic groups in the fight against Nazi
    Germany. But in recent years, multitudes of war films have tended to
    focus on the Russian war effort.

    Abadzhyan, 38, graduated from the All-Russia State Institute of
    Cinematography (VGIK), where he attended the classes of Armen
    Dzhigarkhanyan, the leading Soviet actor of Armenian descent.

    His character is a former literature teacher turned amateur sapper,
    who heads a small partisan unit in occupied Ukraine. With only limited
    forces at his disposal he tries to free Soviet prisoners of war,
    who are being forced to work in a military factory manufacturing
    landmines for the German army.

    "Sappers" was jointly produced by Sinebridzh Kinokompania and Odesskaya
    Kinostudia, and shot on location in the village of Yegorovka in
    Ukraine. The movie is a filmmaking debut for the prominent film actor
    Boris Shcherbakov, who played action heroes in a number of war movies
    in the Soviet period. "Every filmmaker has a duty to make a war movie,"
    Shcherbakov said at the premiere Kinoteatr Khudozhestvenny in April,
    where it headlined a series of films screened to mark Victory Day.

    "I was shocked recently then I saw a television program about the
    rise of neo-Nazi movement in Russia," Shcherbakov said in a recent
    interview in Kazanskiye Vedomosti. "Most of them are young Russian
    kids. I cannot comprehend how those people, whose grandfathers took
    part in the war, became followers of Nazi ideology."

    While "Sappers" doesn't bring anything particularly new to the genre,
    the decision to have an Armenian as a lead character comes against
    the background of increasing xenophobic, ultranationalist violence
    in Moscow. Just last month, four people were convicted of carrying
    out an attack at Cherkizovsky Market in 2006 motivated by hate for
    natives of the Caucasus and Asian countries.

    At the premiere, Moscow businessman and part-time actor Dmitry Potash
    said showing people of different ethnicities as war heroes can help
    to cool violent nationalism. "If someone sees a Caucasian man on the
    screen as a soldier, he will think about this country's contribution
    to the victory," he said.

    "Making an Armenian a leading movie hero refreshes our memory about
    the war, which had an international character," Potash said. "It
    would be wrong to say that only Russian soldiers fought in the war."

    "Nationalism is a very painful subject," said Midia Muradova, 31,
    an Armenian-born Muscovite who also attended the premiere. "My
    grandfather fought too. At that time we were one big country."

    "Sappers" (Sapyory) is showing at the Sputnik Cinema, located at 15
    Soldatskaya Ul. Metro Aviamotornaya. Tel. 361-4220. The film is also
    available on DVD.
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