DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema

Captain Volkonogov Escaped

Defector of Stalin's barbaric secret police seeks forgiveness from the family members of the people he executed, in this very bizarre political fable - live from the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival

QUICK SNAP: LIVE FROM TALLINN

Young, strong and handsome Fyodor Volkonogov (Yiuri Borisov) works as an executioner for Stalin’s much feared People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs (known by the Russian acronym NKVD) in Leningrad. The year is 1938, and with international tensions rising, so do mistrust and fear amongst ordinary Russians. Traitors are routinely denounced, promptly court-martialed and executed. “Terrorists”, “saboteurs”, “anti-Soviet propangadists” and “spies” are enemies of the Motherland, and their existence must not be tolerated. Even harbouring a defector was deemed a crime punishable with death.

One day Volkonogov finds out that the people that he executes are in fact innocent. They have not betrayed the regime. Instead, they confessed under “special methods of interrogation” (an euphemism for torture). These methods include chocking, crunching bones and repeatedly jumping on top of the victims. The tactics are extremely successful, with the hapless men and women soon confessing to their “crimes”. Not even the fascists were so effective, notes the father of one of the victims.

These executions were preventative. The only “crime” that these people had committed was a very remote, involuntary association with the enemy, such as German and Polish blood, or a friend who fled the country. The NKVD wished to stop potential traitors before they could even think of double-crossing the nation. This is the pinnacle of perversion. Corruption, brutality and the subversion of justice were the modus operandi of Stalin’s agency.

The revelation triggers Volkonogov to desert the NKVD, taking with him the files of the innocent people wrongly executed. He seeks their surviving relatives (a father, a daughter, a husband and even a child), revealing the truth and begging for their absolution. Some suspect that the gesture might be a clever ruse, and refuse to believe Volkonogov. Others tell him to “fuck off”, and resort to violence. The charming officer is mostly unmoved by the feelings and reactions. There is no sense of compassion and solidarity. Instead he is obsessed with salvation: he wants to go to heaven. Demanding forgiveness is an authoritarian act of selfishness. It legitimises complacence and turns an executioner into a self-serving hero.

The recreation of Saint Petersburg in the 1930s (then Leningrad) is very convincing. This is a mainstream film with a large budget, partly financed by the Russian Ministry of Culture (in an extraordinarily rare moment of historical evaluation), with additional funds coming from the Venice Gap-Financing Market Projects, France and Estonia. Estonian cinematographer Mart Taniel crafts a compelling visual narrative, successfully transporting audiences eight decades back in time. The derelict yellow buildings and the broad, sparsely populated streets of Russia’s second city provide a chilling backdrop to this imaginative fable.

Sadly the same cannot be said about the script, penned by the two directors. The dialogues are constrained, and the actors sound disengaged. Ultimately, the performances are as contrived as Volkonogov’s quest for salvation, and Russian government’s unusual gesture of self-criticism. As a result, Captain Volkonogov Escaped often feels cold and dispassionate. It fails to move viewers.

Captain Volkonogov Escaped just showed as part of the Official Selection of the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival. The film is showing out-of-competition because it premiered earlier this year in Venice.


By Victor Fraga - 20-11-2021

Victor Fraga is a Brazilian born and London-based journalist and filmmaker with more than 20 years of involvement in the cinema industry and beyond. He is an LGBT writer, and describes himself as a di...

DMovies Poll

Are the Oscars dirty enough for DMovies?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Most Read

Forget Friday the 13th, Paranormal Activity and the [Read More...]
Just a few years back, finding a film [Read More...]
A lot of British people would rather forget [Read More...]
Pigs might fly. And so Brexit might happen. [Read More...]
Sexual diversity is at the very heart of [Read More...]
Films quotes are very powerful not just because [Read More...]

Read More

Lenita – Traces of a Lady

Dácio Pinheiro
2024

Victor Fraga - 02-05-2024

Finely crafted documentary rescues the work and the personal history of a pioneering however long-forgotten fashion-photographer-turned-horse-breeder from Brazil [Read More...]

Poor Things where you never expected!

 

Pedro Garcia - 01-05-2024

Our reader Pedro Garcia came across Yorgos Lanthimos's dirty movie Poor Things in a very unexpectedly clean place: Disney Plus; he shares his thoughts about the peculiar experience [Read More...]

The 4 dirtiest love scenes in 50 Shades of Grey

 

Mariana Hallquist - 01-05-2024

Our reader Mariana Hallquist dissects the controversial sexual psychothriller from 2015, and reveals the steamy, the unexpected and the downright filthy scenes (including their timecode!) [Read More...]

Facebook Comment

Website Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *