Chernobyl: Abyss

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Chernobyl: Abyss
(Chernobyl 1986)
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDanila Kozlovsky
Written by
  • Aleksey Kazakov
  • Elena Ivanova
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyKseniya Sereda
Edited byMariya Likhachyova
Music byOleg Karpachev
Production
companies
Distributed byCentral Partnership
Release date
  • April 15, 2021 (2021-04-15)
Running time
136 minutes
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian
Budget₽690 million

Chernobyl: Abyss (Russian: Чернобыль), also titled Chernobyl 1986, is a 2021 Russian disaster film directed by and starring Danila Kozlovsky.[1] The film centres on a fictionalised firefighter who becomes a liquidator during the Chernobyl disaster.[2] The film was released in Russia by Central Partnership on 15 April 2021,[3] and was subsequently picked up by Netflix in July 2021.[1][2][4]

Plot

The year is 1986, and 30-year old Pripyat firefighter Alexey Karpushin has begun to reconnect with a former lover, local hairdresser Olga Savostina. Olga reveals to him that he is the father of her 10-year-old son. Their growing romance falters when Alexey fails to turn up for a picnic with Olga and their son, and Olga tells him never to visit again. Alexey applies to be reassigned to Kyiv for a fresh start and is just about to leave when the explosion at the nearby Chernobyl power plant occurs, and instead, he boards a fire truck heading to reactor number 4.

Alexey survives the radiation exposure in the initial fight to control the fire. As the scale of the disaster becomes apparent, the potential for an even greater catastrophe is identified – a secondary steam explosion of a large water reservoir, which lies beneath the melting reactor, and that would eject enormous quantities of radioactive core material into the upper atmosphere, placing the European continent in danger. Alexey has prior experience of conducting fire inspections on the corridors that lie underneath nuclear reactors, however, he is reluctant to sign up for what will likely be a suicide mission to manually drain the water reservoir before the reactor collapses into it. Alexey then learns that his son is now suffering from radiation exposure and is at risk of dying. He agrees to join the team on the basis that his son will be sent to Switzerland for radiation treatment.

After an unsuccessful first attempt, Alexey is convinced by his teammate Valera to make a second attempt to drain the water reservoir. During the ultimately successful second attempt, Valera is trapped but cuts the connecting rig to enable Alexey to escape without him. However, Alexey refuses to abandon Valera, and as the water is drained, the rescuers find Alexey in a heavily irradiated state. He is reunited with Olga in the hospital who embraces him before he dies. Three months later, his son returns after successful treatment in Switzerland.

Cast

Production

Vikings. Kozlovsky was initially dismissive but told the New York Times, that the more he read the script "the more I understood that this was an incredible event that influenced the history of our country, which is still a rather complex topic".[1] Recognizing the impact of the 2019 television drama, Chernobyl[citation needed], and its detailed chronicle and exposure of the failings of the Soviet system, Rodnyansky and Kozlovsky instead sought to focus on the human story, and particularly on the liquidators, whose individual heroism prevented the disaster escalating even further at great personal cost.[1]

The film was partly funded by the Russian State through the Cinema Foundation.[1][3]

Release

The film was released in Russia on 15 April 2021 by Central Partnership. North American distribution rights were acquired by Capelight Pictures, and it was added to the Netflix platform in July 2021.[3]

Reception

At its initial Russian release, Chris Brown in CBC News called the film a "missed opportunity", and that it "downplayed the misconduct and lies that Soviet authorities told in an effort to conceal the extent of the disaster".[2] Reviewing its subsequent July release on Netflix, Mark Beaumont in the NME called the film: "a classic disaster movie; World Trade Center in scale and Titanic in execution", and forgave some of its fictionalized handling and lack of overt criticism of the Soviet system as saying "Hollywood has spent decades rewriting history – should we really chastise others for doing the same?".[4] Valerie Hopkins in the New York Times wrote: "Whereas the HBO approach was to dissect systemic flaws in the Soviet system that led to the disaster, the Russian film does something familiar to the country’s cultural tradition: emphasizing the role of the individual, people’s personal heroism and dedication to a higher cause".[1]

See also

References

  1. ^
    New York Times
    . Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Brown, Chris (4 May 2021). "New Russian film on Chornobyl nuclear disaster skips the coverup, focuses on heroes". CBC News. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Vourlias, Christopher (24 February 2021). "'Vikings' Star Danila Kozlovsky on 'Artistic Dream' of Helming High-Octane 'Chernobyl'". Variety. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  4. ^ a b Beaumont, Mark (22 July 2021). "'Chernobyl 1986': assessing Russia's big-screen riposte to the hit HBO miniseries". Retrieved 1 December 2021. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)

External links