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Documentary Releases: Navalny (2022) - Reviewed
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Courtesy of WarnerMedia |
While the world continues to watch the events unfolding in
the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, Warner Brothers, CNN, HBO Max and young
documentary filmmaker Daniel Roher have reeled the clock back to roughly around
August 20th, 2020 when Russian opposition leader and presidential
candidate Alexey Navalny was poisoned with a Novichok nerve agent, nearly
killing him on his flight from Tomsk to Moscow before being put into a coma and
transferred to a hospital in Berlin, Germany where he recovered. While recovering, with the help of Bulgarian
investigative journalist Christo Grosev, Navalny proceeded to track down and
publicly identify his FSB assailants before making the brave decision to return
to Russia where he faced immediate arrest and imprisonment to this day.
Made largely in secret and assembled urgently, announced
just days before his arrest on January 17th, 2021 and in limited theatrical
release via Fathom Events impending a CNN and eventual streaming release, Navalny
though an unfinished story still unfolding is a remarkably engaging and
entertaining bilingual documentary film that’s at once a self-portrait of the
titular activist as well as a paean to the courage to stand up and make a
difference even if the likely outcome won’t effect change. Mostly it is a David vs. Goliath story of one
Russian figure, controversial though he may be in areas the film touches on,
who made an unthinkable personal crusade against current Russian president
Vladimir Putin which Navalny pins the poisoning blame on.

Intercut with videos shot by the crew as well as archival
phone videos captured during the flight, at the hospital during his recovery
and again at the airport during his arrest, the film is an amalgam of preexisting
pieces and newly shot-for-the-doc sequences which exhibit a notable jump in
picture and sound quality. Jumping
freely between sources, the film continues to circle back to Navalny, who tells
much of his story in English at a barstool with a glass of Vodka on hand. The experience of watching Navalny while
intended to make his story and struggle known has the unintended side effect of
being akin to stand up comedy with Navalny’s wry sense of humor constantly
making cracks about his predicament and the threat he poses to the regime.
Shot handsomely by Niki Waltl and scored by two composers
Marius de Vries and Matt Robertson, Navalny was originally intended to
just be an investigation of Grosev’s findings including prank calls which got
FSB agents to cough up details about Navalny’s poisoning, the subsequent arrest
of Navalny captured by the filmmakers transformed the work into something else entirely. Whether or not the film has the impact of
freeing Navalny from imprisonment remains to be seen but what is here is one of
the most interesting and timely documentary films to get a theatrical release
this year.
For director Daniel Roher whose previous documentary
chronicled Robbie Robertson and The Band with Once Were Brothers, Navalny
is like a hot potato dropped into his lap that’s both immediate and has the
capacity to burn you. Most who have been
following the headlines won’t get any new information they don’t already know
about but even then Navalny humanizes it’s subject, touching briefly on
the bad while mostly highlighting the good and in the end vying for hopeful change
for a better life. By the end of it, irrespective
of where you stand politically and personally, you feel like you’ve met this
man firsthand in a good firm handshake.
--Andrew Kotwicki