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11

Dec

2024

Film screening and discussion: 900 Days

Is it better to acknowledge the almost unpalatable truth, or to embrace the comfort of a myth? Join the event at Zita Folkets Bio and discuss with filmmaker Jessica Gorter!

The Centre for Baltic and East European Studies (CBEES) is hosting another film screening with a renowned documentarist. Following the screening, there will be a discussion with Jessica Gorter and guest speakers.

More details will be provided soon.

Film summary:
From September 1941 until January 1944, Leningrad was sieged and blockaded by the German army. For 900 days, the nearly three million inhabitants were trapped inside the city like rats. In subzero temperatures, people had to eat glue, leather soles, cats, and sometimes even their fellow human beings.
After 900 days, almost a million people had died. All this took place in a country where propaganda was more important than truth. For decades afterwards, the survivors were forbidden to speak about what had happened to them so that the heroic myth of the “land of victors” would not be undermined. And now, with Putin in power, the myth is being revived. What starts as a film about personal testimonies of the blockade of Leningrad gradually turns into an epic story about how censorship, propaganda and fear get a grip on the memories of the main characters. A struggle that is still ongoing today.

  • Duration: 77 minutes
  • Language: English; Russian with English subtitles
  • Release year: 2012

Jessica Gorter is a Dutch documentary filmmaker. She studied directing and editing at the Dutch Film and Television Academy in Amsterdam. Her films revolve around the tension between personal memories and history at large. They are critically acclaimed for never being unequivocal and characterized by her visual and observing style.

Her films are screened worldwide at film festivals, theatrically released and broadcasted internationally. Gorter made her breakthrough with 900 Days (2011) about the myth and reality of the Leningrad blockade. The film won a.o. the IDFA Award for Best Dutch Documentary, the Prix Interreligieux at Visions du Réel and the special jury prize at ArtDocFest in Moscow. In 2014 Jessica received the prestigious Documentary Award from the Dutch Prince Bernhard Cultural Fund for her work.

Earlier in her career, she made the short poetic documentary Ferryman across the Volga (1997, a.o. Prix de RTBF) and Piter (IFFR, 2004): a captivating look into the lives of seven residents of Saint Petersburg at a turning point in history. In her third feature-length film, The Red Soul (2017), the director investigated why Stalin is still seen as a hero by so many Russians. Her latest documentary, The Dmitriev Affair (2023, a.o. Best Human Rights Film at Verzío FF)) is a thematic continuation of all the films she has made in Russia since the 90s: laying bare the consequences for individual lives of the disintegration of the Soviet Union.

More details of the programme will be presented here shortly.

Time and place

11 December 2024, 18:00-20:30

Other

Zita Folkets Bio

English

Arranged by

Centre for Baltic and East European Studies (CBEES), Södertörn University

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Page updated

11-11-2024