'Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom' Comes to Netflix
Q&A with documentary director Evgeny Afineevsky
"No one was expecting to have kids beaten at 4 o'clock in the morning. No one was expecting people to be kidnapped or killed. It was just unfolding," explains Evgeny Afineevsky, director of the film Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom, which documents the 93 day uprising that led to the downfall of president Viktor Yanukovych. The film, which recently won the People's Choice documentary award at the Toronto International Film Festiva, will be debuting on Netflix on Oct. 9th. "We were just trying to capture every moment and document everything. All of a sudden I was in the middle of this uprising and I was capturing the history."
Afineevsky's film, which he calls "a cinematic monument" to the heroes of the Ukrainian revolution, is a sympathetic portrait of the conditions and actions of the protesters fighting against a corrupt regime and for closer ties to the European Union. While some reviews have criticized the singular viewpoint of the movie, Afineevsky defended his vision during a recent interview with Reason TV's Nick Gillespie.
"The other side of the story is politicians and police. Police were not allowed to talk to the camera….And the politicians, every time you point a camera to the politician his story is promoting himself, and promoting his party, and his agenda. It is not the human story that I was trying to capture. For me this movie was the human story… not the politicians' agendas."
Approximately 6:30 minutes.
Produced by Meredith Bragg. Shot by Joshua Swain and Todd Krainin. Winter on Fire footage courtesy of Netflix.
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I wouldn't call it a documentary per se but it did show some seriously violent police conduct. People threw bricks and rocks but after weeks and weeks of police brutality.
Police used live rounds to kill unarmed protesters who were not threatening police lives. There is just no excuse