The Prague Post - Ukraine's reopening cinemas offer refuge from reality -- and air raids

EUR -
AED 4.302084
AFN 80.231021
ALL 96.51232
AMD 448.101652
ANG 2.097031
AOA 1074.047421
ARS 1674.612094
AUD 1.769773
AWG 1.647087
AZN 1.989617
BAM 1.963288
BBD 2.358094
BDT 142.583802
BGN 1.955654
BHD 0.441525
BIF 3449.366853
BMD 1.171262
BND 1.515214
BOB 8.119795
BRL 6.223619
BSD 1.170765
BTN 103.926932
BWP 15.605184
BYN 3.972049
BYR 22956.736949
BZD 2.35458
CAD 1.634069
CDF 2951.580513
CHF 0.931681
CLF 0.028781
CLP 1129.084872
CNY 8.338797
CNH 8.365019
COP 4525.405334
CRC 588.444274
CUC 1.171262
CUP 31.038445
CVE 110.390985
CZK 24.306383
DJF 208.156585
DKK 7.465132
DOP 73.353498
DZD 151.872859
EGP 55.745867
ERN 17.568931
ETB 169.947197
FJD 2.637452
FKP 0.869299
GBP 0.868631
GEL 3.191679
GGP 0.869299
GHS 14.756053
GIP 0.869299
GMD 85.502629
GNF 10160.698088
GTQ 8.974227
GYD 244.878719
HKD 9.114744
HNL 30.64061
HRK 7.535314
HTG 153.204308
HUF 388.835001
IDR 19434.751847
ILS 3.836147
IMP 0.869299
INR 103.92181
IQD 1534.353337
IRR 49251.57029
ISK 141.734327
JEP 0.869299
JMD 187.575396
JOD 0.830396
JPY 175.945234
KES 151.678888
KGS 102.427077
KHR 4693.247541
KMF 491.929935
KPW 1054.137646
KRW 1651.825036
KWD 0.357879
KYD 0.9757
KZT 637.122731
LAK 25387.106136
LBP 104886.520386
LKR 354.050316
LRD 213.374701
LSL 20.157402
LTL 3.458433
LVL 0.708485
LYD 6.342347
MAD 10.679557
MDL 19.628442
MGA 5239.055204
MKD 61.612217
MMK 2459.638073
MNT 4211.25926
MOP 9.386599
MRU 46.698111
MUR 53.093793
MVR 17.921499
MWK 2033.88691
MXN 21.50053
MYR 4.936885
MZN 74.851572
NAD 20.157553
NGN 1722.750631
NIO 42.897424
NOK 11.619418
NPR 166.28309
NZD 2.004557
OMR 0.450342
PAB 1.170715
PEN 4.054843
PGK 4.900268
PHP 68.213827
PKR 329.47742
PLN 4.25484
PYG 8201.278947
QAR 4.264858
RON 5.09171
RSD 117.170709
RUB 97.213488
RWF 1695.987505
SAR 4.393258
SBD 9.64067
SCR 17.129731
SDG 704.508671
SEK 10.981888
SGD 1.512685
SHP 0.920428
SLE 27.301897
SLL 24560.784672
SOS 669.36802
SRD 45.231768
STD 24242.760478
STN 24.947883
SVC 10.24407
SYP 15228.732383
SZL 20.168843
THB 37.936591
TJS 10.923327
TMT 4.099417
TND 3.391956
TOP 2.743218
TRY 48.823595
TTD 7.935928
TWD 35.721102
TZS 2875.448415
UAH 48.365863
UGX 4041.413591
USD 1.171262
UYU 46.748294
UZS 14142.989072
VES 216.87856
VND 30880.324983
VUV 141.378791
WST 3.259851
XAF 658.440124
XAG 0.02406
XAU 0.000296
XCD 3.165394
XCG 2.110048
XDR 0.815509
XOF 655.319637
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.989944
ZAR 20.132965
ZMK 10542.766123
ZMW 27.893789
ZWL 377.145915
  • RBGPF

    -2.2200

    76

    -2.92%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.8

    -0.29%

  • BCC

    -2.4850

    75.145

    -3.31%

  • GSK

    0.1080

    43.458

    +0.25%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    17.01

    -0.59%

  • NGG

    0.4700

    73.9

    +0.64%

  • RELX

    0.0450

    46.455

    +0.1%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    15.7

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    1.0000

    67.11

    +1.49%

  • JRI

    -0.1080

    14.192

    -0.76%

  • AZN

    0.2650

    85.575

    +0.31%

  • CMSD

    -0.0480

    24.402

    -0.2%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    23.16

    -0.86%

  • VOD

    -0.0850

    11.275

    -0.75%

  • BTI

    -0.2050

    51.035

    -0.4%

  • BP

    0.6700

    34.83

    +1.92%

Ukraine's reopening cinemas offer refuge from reality -- and air raids
Ukraine's reopening cinemas offer refuge from reality -- and air raids / Photo: SERGEI CHUZAVKOV - AFP

Ukraine's reopening cinemas offer refuge from reality -- and air raids

From the Hollywood blockbuster to the high-brow film noir, the silver screen offers a few hours' peace in a darkened refuge from the mundane grind of the nine to five.

Text size:

But Ukraine's filmgoers have begun seeking literal shelter in subterranean screenings offering protection from the ever-present threat of missiles from above.

After Russia's invasion in February shuttered picture houses nationwide and production ground to a halt, the country's resilient film industry is making a tentative comeback.

KINO42, in downtown Kyiv, is among around 20 of the city's 50 or so cinemas that have reopened in recent weeks. As the capital's only underground cinema, it is a unique offering for movie buffs wary of air raids.

The screen -- which has 42 seats around four metres (13 feet) below street level -- reopened in June, its program of upcoming screenings displayed on a backlit board above the newly added words "cinema shelter".

"It's a literal cinema shelter since it's located in a basement," Ilko Gladshtein, a partner in the business, told AFP at the recent launch of its program of Ukrainian classics.

The theatre, which first opened in 2019, has always been underground -- but while this was once an unremarkable aspect of its architecture, Gladshtein says it has become a "unique selling point".

"KINO42 is the safest cinema in Kyiv right now. We don't interrupt screenings during air raids," he told AFP.

- Sold out -

The 37-year-old film festival manager and movie producer has been surprised by the size of the evening audiences, although the schedule has been bumped forward to accommodate an 11:00 pm wartime curfew.

"June is a tough month for film distribution, but I can see that people are hungry for films. We've held three charity screenings and sent around $1,000 to the Ukrainian army," he said.

"It gives us the confidence to know not only that we are entertaining people, but also that we are doing something important for the troops on the front."

Unlike multiplexes that screen the big Hollywood releases of the day, KINO42 has always prioritised Ukrainian cinema, and preserving the country's cultural identity has become especially important since the invasion.

The venue has teamed up with the Dovzhenko Centre, the nation's biggest film archive, and has expanded from one weekly screening to three, all sold out.

At a launch event on Thursday last week KINO42 put on "Odd, Bizarre and Fantastic," a series of animated shorts from the 1980s and '90s, with tickets all snapped up three days before the screening.

Stanislav Bitiutskiy, a 38-year-old researcher at the Dovzhenko Centre, says every social or political cataclysm forces a nationwide reckoning over Ukrainian identity.

"It first happened during the Maidan revolution," he told AFP, describing the aftermath of the deadly 2014 clashes between protesters and security forces that led to the overthrow of President Viktor Yanukovych.

"Now, once again, we need to redefine our identity by means of art."

- 'Another reality' -

A little further down the street, the much larger above-ground Zhovten picture house -- which is nearly a century old -- was among the first of Kyiv's reopened venues.

The multi-screen playhouse sold out a 400-seat auditorium on the launch night of its Ukrainian classics program with a showing of Sergey Paradzhanov's 1965 opus, "Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors."

"We wanted to support the country's economy as well as people's psychological wellbeing," said its director Yulia Antypova, 46.

"Psychologists say that this kind of mental decompression, and the opportunity to escape to another reality, are extremely important."

Here, the possibility of missile strikes is a constant threat.

Zhovten interrupts screenings for 20 minutes when the sirens begin and asks audiences to get to a nearby shelter.

If the alert lasts longer, the screening is cancelled and the customers are asked to come back with their tickets another day.

The return to the silver screen has been gradual, with ticket sales about 30 percent of pre-war figures.

Attendance drops every time a Russian missile slams into a civilian area.

"The human psyche is quite resilient though," says Antypova. "In a few days, attendance recovers -- until the next strike."

G.Turek--TPP