After shocking audiences at the Antenna Documentary Film Festival earlier this year, 20 DAYS AT MARIUPOL streams exclusively on DocPlay from March 7.
It’s painful to watch. It should be painful. 20 DAYS AT MARIUPOL is a conscience stricken, gut wrenching, painful experience, a necessary bearing of witness to an unnecessary war.
When Vladimir Putin announced a ‘special military operation’ on 24 February 2022, Associated Press journalists Mystlav Chernov, Vasilisa Stepanenko, and Evgeniy Maloletka headed immediately to Mariupol, the eastern Ukrainian city just 60 kilometres from the Russian border.
They arrived on quiet streets just before the first bombs fell. No one would have believed the horror to come, and without their courageous reportage, no one could have. They were the only international reporters at the siege to document Russia’s actions.
The images are extreme – we see children killed and a maternity hospital destroyed. ‘This is painful to watch. But it must be painful to watch,’ Chernov says.
Such graphic content becomes immediately understandable as we are shown clips from Russian television cut into the real-time horrors, which claim that each foreign report is ‘fully staged’ fake news.
Winner of the Sundance Audience Award for World Cinema Documentary, this devastating war diary is nominated for Best Documentary Feature, in the upcoming Academy Awards, where it is a clear and present favourite. The result will be televised Monday March 11.
In the shadow of an event so desperate and traumatic, truly terrible, wholly horrific, criticism, plaudits, honours and awards are an irrelevance. 20 DAYS IN MARIUPOL exists as an uncompromising record of inhumanity that one can only wish had been averted.