The Prague Post - Russia's 'Mr Nobody' gambles all with film on Kremlin propaganda

EUR -
AED 4.303863
AFN 82.246499
ALL 98.021992
AMD 449.671513
ANG 2.097286
AOA 1074.646617
ARS 1391.811212
AUD 1.792193
AWG 2.112377
AZN 1.996908
BAM 1.955241
BBD 2.364524
BDT 143.229075
BGN 1.96181
BHD 0.440474
BIF 3488.003358
BMD 1.171915
BND 1.494273
BOB 8.091688
BRL 6.421514
BSD 1.171065
BTN 100.139387
BWP 15.656526
BYN 3.832405
BYR 22969.536814
BZD 2.352328
CAD 1.606755
CDF 3376.287953
CHF 0.947843
CLF 0.028433
CLP 1091.108233
CNY 8.405566
CNH 8.406054
COP 4731.24812
CRC 590.631236
CUC 1.171915
CUP 31.055751
CVE 110.233503
CZK 24.729407
DJF 208.540413
DKK 7.459948
DOP 69.670093
DZD 151.08583
EGP 58.232361
ERN 17.578727
ETB 158.200997
FJD 2.626555
FKP 0.854054
GBP 0.864978
GEL 3.188067
GGP 0.854054
GHS 12.121536
GIP 0.854054
GMD 83.796446
GNF 10146.100911
GTQ 9.006427
GYD 244.900024
HKD 9.19954
HNL 30.599257
HRK 7.534833
HTG 153.526132
HUF 398.896931
IDR 19027.50725
ILS 3.968333
IMP 0.854054
INR 100.207124
IQD 1534.061666
IRR 49366.925837
ISK 141.989691
JEP 0.854054
JMD 187.676374
JOD 0.830934
JPY 169.506397
KES 151.356752
KGS 102.418398
KHR 4694.658575
KMF 492.794764
KPW 1054.723659
KRW 1598.902875
KWD 0.35836
KYD 0.975921
KZT 609.225923
LAK 25253.784127
LBP 104926.318947
LKR 351.19965
LRD 234.213077
LSL 20.971708
LTL 3.460361
LVL 0.70888
LYD 6.342188
MAD 10.573479
MDL 19.832333
MGA 5148.528888
MKD 61.512424
MMK 2460.630022
MNT 4200.040247
MOP 9.469694
MRU 46.702655
MUR 52.924131
MVR 18.051875
MWK 2030.619782
MXN 22.056088
MYR 4.955448
MZN 74.956135
NAD 20.971708
NGN 1809.132725
NIO 43.097686
NOK 11.809512
NPR 160.223219
NZD 1.934875
OMR 0.448972
PAB 1.171065
PEN 4.156612
PGK 4.83062
PHP 66.342555
PKR 332.139896
PLN 4.243905
PYG 9345.329718
QAR 4.26858
RON 5.081311
RSD 117.146527
RUB 92.123677
RWF 1691.016818
SAR 4.395033
SBD 9.782372
SCR 17.186389
SDG 703.739351
SEK 11.112112
SGD 1.495251
SHP 0.920941
SLE 26.372388
SLL 24574.478898
SOS 669.208784
SRD 44.293749
STD 24256.277385
SVC 10.247072
SYP 15237.070983
SZL 20.967009
THB 38.151742
TJS 11.546601
TMT 4.113422
TND 3.423522
TOP 2.744747
TRY 46.801316
TTD 7.948729
TWD 34.106291
TZS 3085.918247
UAH 48.826249
UGX 4209.797116
USD 1.171915
UYU 47.17652
UZS 14739.788336
VES 124.930261
VND 30581.125672
VUV 139.344264
WST 3.208104
XAF 655.769624
XAG 0.032565
XAU 0.000358
XCD 3.16716
XDR 0.815567
XOF 655.769624
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.896869
ZAR 20.891322
ZMK 10548.646794
ZMW 27.725078
ZWL 377.356198
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Russia's 'Mr Nobody' gambles all with film on Kremlin propaganda
Russia's 'Mr Nobody' gambles all with film on Kremlin propaganda / Photo: Michal Cizek - AFP

Russia's 'Mr Nobody' gambles all with film on Kremlin propaganda

When Moscow invaded Ukraine, Pavel Talankin, a staff member at a secondary school in Russia's Ural Mountains, was ordered to film patriotic lessons, songs and morning drills.

Text size:

Talankin, the school's event organiser and also a keen videographer, found the propaganda work so depressing that he wanted to quit his job in the industrial town of Karabash.

Then he received what he says was the strangest message of his life.

A Europe-based filmmaker got in touch, offering to collaborate on a project to document the abrupt militarisation of Talankin's school in the wake of Russia's February 2022 invasion of its neighbour.

Talankin had earlier seen a post from a Russian company looking for people whose jobs had been affected by the war. Talankin said he was ready to talk.

After receiving the foreigner's offer Talankin did not sleep all night.

The project changed his life forever.

After teaming up with David Borenstein and shooting many hours of footage, Talankin last summer fled Russia with seven hard discs, leaving behind his mother, brothers and sisters and the town he loved.

Using the smuggled-out footage Borenstein, a Denmark-based US filmmaker, directed what became "Mr Nobody Against Putin", an award-winning 90-minute documentary which exposes the intensity of the propaganda at Talankin's school and throughout Karabash.

It premiered at the 2025 Sundance film festival in January.

- 'Persona non grata' -

The project cost Talankin dearly. Local officials banned his former colleagues from contacting him, he became a hate figure for supporters of the war and his school librarian mother was upset.

"I have become a persona non grata," Talankin, 34, told AFP from Prague, where he is now based.

Russia outlawed all criticism of the Russian military and the Kremlin and Talankin knew he had taken huge risks.

But he has no regrets.

"I would do it all over again."

He has been buoyed by the support of people featured in the film including those who lost their loved ones in the war.

One former colleague said she became ashamed that she, too, was "part of the system."

The documentary reaped awards at festivals and the film crew hopes it will be available to wider audiences in Europe later this year. Borenstein said the film's success had been a "relief" because the multi-national crew overcame numerous obstacles including communication and security.

But above all he was "really scared" that if the film flopped Talankin's sacrifice would come to nothing.

"I knew the whole time that Pasha would have to leave Russia to make this project happen," Borenstein told AFP, referring to his co-director by his diminutive.

"That is a huge sacrifice for him, because his mum is there, his whole life is there, he does not speak English, not at that time."

Talankin has not been able to join the crew to present the film at the Sundance festival in Utah and elsewhere due to paperwork issues, but the team hopes this will soon change.

For now he is learning English and adjusting to his new life in Prague.

- 'Like musketeers' -

Talankin said he was heartened by the reactions at the screenings.

One viewer in the Czech Republic said he hated Russians but the film made him reconsider. "We knew nothing about what was happening to you," Talankin quoted the Czech as saying.

"It is a powerful and poetic piece of cinema," said producer Alexandra Fechner, who is promoting the film in France.

"This film shows the hidden side of propaganda in Russia, which targets the youngest members of society, children who are being taught a rewritten version of history and given guns!" she said.

With the war in its fourth year, Moscow has put society on a war footing and leveraged the educational system to raise a fiercely pro-Kremlin generation.

The film features Wagner mercenaries telling children about hand grenades and teachers calling Ukrainians "neo-Nazi", and includes an audio recording of a wailing mother at her soldier son's funeral.

But critics also point to the documentary's empathy and light touch.

In one episode, a history teacher tells pupils that the spiralling prices could soon make gas unaffordable for Europeans.

"The French will soon be like musketeers, riding horses, and the rest of Europe too," he said.

Borenstein said that by viewing the footage sent by Talankin nearly every day, he understood the effect of the dehumanising war-time propaganda.

While at the beginning he found some of the clips shocking, months later his mind had become so used to the onslaught of the propaganda that he did not see the footage depicting the Wagner mercenaries as something abnormal.

"I was able to replicate among myself some of the feelings that maybe the students and people in the school felt," he said. "Looking at this propaganda every single day was a lesson in how desensitised you can become to it."

A lot of the footage had not made it into the film, including the school's preparations for the possibility of a nuclear attack.

Karabash is located close to one of Russia's most sensitive sites, the Mayak nuclear reprocessing plant.

Talankin said Borenstein did not want the viewers to "drown in the enormous amount of negative material."

"I have plans for this footage," Talankin said. "Sooner or later I will start slowly releasing it."

L.Hajek--TPP