. we went to mariupol on the front lines and then we also were in kyiv and talking to musicians and you get a sense of the culture. but there was the you know, the wagner problem that was going on at the time. and so the administration was very slow. we couldn t see him. we came back and then this thing really escalated. so then we went i think we got there roughly a week before the invasion and we met him i met him face to face for the first time the day before the invasion and then spent t time with him in which we document in the film during the invasion on the day of the invasion. and ii don t know that there sn a person on earth who who could know that they were born forld such a day that they could rise to it. i want to make sure i saw when you say invasion, was this him taking the two regions, etc. or whatever they were also rockets coming in . this is also when they this is when they hit the airport fifteen klicks out of right. kids. so it was it was a game on and
yes. prepared for it. yes. hoping against hope it would not happen. who had not yet been challenged with it s happening and the next dayy. i saw something that is a man but it s a man with thewi adrenalized. he is the face of something that you see in all ukrainians. we saw and talked to whether they were in uniform out of uniforms, school teachers, even children. this extraordinaryhi courage that s come up and it was in his eyes and it is clear to me that the ukrainians will win this . the question is at what cost did they have in those early hours? i know that trump gave them chaplains. i know that they had some defenses. but to goav back to the budapesa agreement, they were at the time the third largest nuclear power in the world and they they made an agreement