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Ukrainian film "Atlantis" screening at Images to benefit victims of Russian invasion

Images Cinema will be screening Ukrainian film “Atlantis” to benefit victims of the bloody Russian aggression on the Eastern European nation.

Fundraiser for Ukraine at Images Cinema

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Images Cinema is having a fundraising event for the victims of the war in Ukraine and screening the Ukrainian film "Atlantis" on Monday, March 28 at 7:30.

Ukraine Requires Women to Register for Military Conscription as Russia Threat Looms

Women between 18 and 60 who are "fit for military service" and work in a broad range of professions are required to register with Ukraine's armed forces.

Atlantis review: glints of hope in war-torn Ukraine

Sign up for Sight & Sound’s Weekly Film Bulletin and more News, reviews and archive features every Friday, and information about our latest magazine once a month. Email Sign up The orange-green glow of heat camera footage reveals a couple of figures, likely soldiers given their bulky clothing and weaponry, standing around a small trench. A prostrate body is dragged in and pitched into the shallow grave, shovelfuls of dirt slung over it. The image is so alien it takes a minute to process its real horror – the blob representing the victim is glowing orange as the black earth gradually obscures it: he is being buried alive. Ukrainian director Valentyn Vasyanovych’s remarkable Venice 2019 Horizons winner Atlantis may immediately switch to exquisitely composed, live-action images of startlingly crisp, austere devastation but his film’s most potent motifs are all established in this eerie, alien opening: war, death, callousness, heat and dirt.

Atlantis movie review: Ukraine-set post-apocalyptic film is more commentary on dystopia than human drama

Atlantis movie review: Ukraine-set post-apocalyptic film is more commentary on dystopia than human drama Firstpost 3 hours ago Siddhant Adlakha © Provided by Firstpost Atlantis movie review: Ukraine-set post-apocalyptic film is more commentary on dystopia than human drama Language: Ukrainian A languid dystopian chronicle of life after war, Valentyn Vasyanovych’s Atlantis frames survivors and workers at an arm’s length from the audience, and at a remove from their own identities. It’s stupendous as commentary and often frigid as human drama, an approach that works both in service of its political examination, as well as to its detriment as engaging cinema. The result is fascinating, if protracted document of dashed dreams, and a liberated Ukraine immersed in so much death and decay that horror itself becomes numbing.

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