Three songs about my country are recorded on the same DVD. It is like Andrei Asenevich and the day in the dark.
Three songs about mothers draw a dramatic clash of modern Russian past, present and future, focusing on three different cities of this vast land.
The symbol of Soviet industrialization existed in the Komsomolsk-Na-Amule city in the Far East in the 1930s, but when the elderly in Russia talks about young people they feel they are a big part of them. On the land where the grass does not grow. Some people insist on those glorious day promises and others disappoint with regretting their ultimate failure.
Then, the international big city Moscow was fought for the young democracy of Russia, Anna Politkovskaya assassinated by political activities in the chaotic power struggle of the nation after the Soviet Union, a fearless journalist and a human rights activist We bid farewell to you. I was overtaken
Finally, residents of Khanty-Mansijsk, one of Siberia's emerging oil industry centers, talk about their beloved fairytale town. Communist dreams will have a new future with a rich future
What are they, and what are their wishes today? What is behind a fairy tale? Does a new "capitalist dream" come true, or is it another illusion, another myth? In the words of Russian great poet Fyodor Tutchev, "We are not destined to predict"
In the movie, three songs sung by the modern singer Elena Kanbrowova as a theme are integrating these three independent stories into a whole. Russia's frankness today Turning picture
"Three songs about mothers provide three interesting portraits of modern Russia." - Anthology review database
"30 years since the glorious era of industrialization, today's frank and most realistic Russian painting" - Russia Review
Tolokonnikova, Alyokhina and three unidentified women are planning to sing a song called Pussy Riot during the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, "I will tell President Putin to love my country." This action should have focused on the prisoners of Bolotnaya Square incident, corrupt Olympic officials, the plight of arrested environmentalist Yevgeny Vitishko, and suppression of Russian freedom. On February 18, 2014, 12 to 15 people, including Yevgeny Feldman, a Nova Yagaza reporter, were detained in Sochi. Authorities explained that the arrest is related to hotel theft at Sochi. A few hours later, they were released from the Adler police station. According to BBC reporter Rafael Sakoff, five women left Balaklava police station and sang their songs in the city of Adler: "President Putin tells you to love your country."
In an authoritarian society, it is public but evident. Before they understood the meaning of the country and ideology, they led the children to train them to advance and sing a patriotic song about their home country. They tried to break their little heads as soon as possible, while they were still plastic and flexible, they bent themselves to the state and collective will. Everyone of these people made constant efforts to succeed. When they crashed and burned, they tried and failed and stood up again. I did not give anything. Of course, they have natural talent, and possibly special psychological ties, but this is their own efforts, curiosity and imagination so that they can achieve eternal glory.