Dutch director Jessica Gorter has a track record of making films that explore the legacy of Russia’s unhealed generational trauma, the devaluation of personal tragedy, and individual resilience in the face of unrelenting propaganda, all of which are facts of life for millions of Russians.
Her new film, The Dmitriev Affair, documents the final months of freedom enjoyed by the historian Yury Dmitriev, who, as head of human rights NGO Memorial in his native Karelia in northern Russia, was responsible for discovering the mass grave where thousands of victims of Stalin’s Great Purge were buried in 1937.
Instead of earning praise for the years of work that led to his his momentous discovery, Dmitriev, long a thorn in the side of the Russian authorities, was arrested and charged with taking inappropriate photographs of his daughter, ultimately being sentenced to 15 years in a penal colony, in a trial that set the tone for the Kremlin’s now common weaponisation of the judiciary to terrorise its enemies.