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Welcome to Chechnya (2020)

Documentary | 107 minutes
3,32 22 votes

Genre: Documentary

Duration: 107 minuten

Country: United States

Directed by: David France

Stars: Olga Baranova, David Isteev and Maxim Lapunov

IMDb score: 7,9 (3.347)

Releasedate: 26 January 2020

Welcome to Chechnya plot

"Inside the Russian Republic's deadly war on gays"

A group of activists risk their lives to fight for LGBTQ rights in Chechnya. In Russia it is dangerous to come out about your sexuality if you are not heterosexual. In fact, it is so dangerous that the 23 people in the documentary who are fleeing are absolutely unable to show their faces to the world. If it becomes known who they are, they run the risk of being hunted and even mistreated.

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avatar van sinterklaas

sinterklaas

  • 11813 messages
  • 3316 votes

A 21st century Russia.

Spicy and mainly nasty documentary about gay/lesbian youths who flee from Chechnya to Russia to go into hiding in a secret building in Moscow. Why go to Moscow you might think; where it is as risky for gays as their homeland....

These young people are well assisted and supported by two activists and this results in many intensive and poignant recordings; considering that this is not an acted film for once. You immediately have a huge amount of sympathy for all the participants in this film. How brave they are and how they persevere to reach their goal. The gay couple, the lesbian young lady... You sympathize with them.

In between, we also get to see archive images that are not sickening. Where gays are mercilessly attacked, kicked, beaten, tortured and even raped in front of the smartphone camera... and the government supposedly knows nothing.

Until the certain moment when I didn't see it coming at all.

A merciless, confrontational but also hopeful documentary. You have to see it to believe.

4.0*

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van T.O.

T.O.

  • 2413 messages
  • 2791 votes

A gripping documentary about anti-LGBT violence in semi-lawless Chechnya, in fact a glorified province of Russia. The state denies everything and seems to (at least) tolerate the behavior. The NGO involved - which seems to have everything in order financially and PR-wise - is doing a brave job in bringing victims to safety.

What comes out well is the life of the refugees; after the initial relief, they appear to end up in a cycle of fear, lack of freedom and boredom.

By the way, a poor average here, compared to the previous comments and the figure on IMDB. No comments from the low voters?

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van mrklm

mrklm

  • 11374 messages
  • 9897 votes

Olga Baranova and David Isteev are committed to people who are at risk of falling victim to the purges in Russia (and Chechnya in particular). France filmed in the crisis center and guaranteed the anonymity of the victims by distorting their faces using deep-fake. Using that technique can distract from the subject, but France regularly adds authentic images (intercepted by activists) in which we see the Russian Federation as a haven for discrimination, aggravated assault and persecution of anyone who does not conform to the traditional heterosexual norm.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original