Shortly after launching its war in Ukraine, the Russian government adopted laws effectively making any balanced reporting on the war a crime, let alone public criticism of the Kremlin’s aggression against its neighbour. The new laws introduced in March 2022 forced some of the most trusted and best-known newspapers, TV channels and radio stations in the country to either end their activity or go into exile.
This pivotal moment in contemporary Russian history was captured on camera by directors Askold Kurov and Anonymous1, and the result is their film Of Caravan and the Dogs. By attending crucial meetings in the newsrooms of Novaya Gazeta, TV channel Dozhd and radio station Ekho Moskvy, as well as witnessing equally fraught decisions being made by the staff of Memorial, one of Russia’s oldest human rights organisations, the film already feels like a historical document and provides a fascinating insight into the struggles faced by those determined to continue working despite the increasingly untenable conditions and ever-rising threat of arrest.
Kurov, who produced Welcome to Chechnya, a documentary shot in secret about the brutal persecution of LGBT people in one of Russia’s most conservative regions, and who also worked on Winter, Go Away, a documentary about the 2011-2012 anti-government protests in Moscow, has himself been forced to leave Russia since shooting the film. Novaya Europe spoke to him about making the documentary and asked him how his understanding of the events he witnessed had changed in the two years that have since passed.