Three Ukrainian films that had their world premiere at last week’s Berlinale examined the war through three very different lenses: one looking the violence directly in the eye, another taking satirical stock of eastern Ukrainian society, and a third, far more personal film, documenting the war’s effect on four generations of women in a single family.
While work on Svitlana Lishchynska’s documentary about her own relatives A Bit of a Stranger began in late 2021, the threat of war hangs over it from the start, not least as their home town Mariupol is now synonymous with Russia’s brutal three-month siege.
Intercutting grainy video footage from her own youth in the 1990s with the contemporary interactions of her mother, daughter and baby grand-daughter, Lishchynska cuts to the heart of the tension within the multigenerational family: having given birth to her daughter, the ambitious, young Svitlana went off to Kyiv to follow her dream of becoming a director, leaving her daughter Sasha to be brought up by her grandmother.
Sasha, now a hairdresser in her early 30s, openly admits she still resents her mother for her choice, her ambition, and, in particular, for not wanting to build her life around having a child. Svitlana, for her part, regrets that they are still somewhat estranged to this day, but remains defiantly unapologetic about her life choices.