Ukrainian filmmaker Kateryna Gornostai makes a case for optimism with the Berlinale doc “Timestamp.”
“It’s a tragic movie, however there’s a variety of hope in these children and in our schooling system that also works. It was essential to make a movie about battle, however battle shouldn’t be within the body,” she informed Selection.
Bowing in Berlinale’s important competitors, “Timestamp” follows Ukrainian college students and lecturers, attempting to keep up normalcy regardless of fixed hazard and the world’s waning curiosity of their plight.
“We have been afraid of [Donald] Trump profitable the [U.S.] presidential seat once more. However you realize, the worst has already occurred: we misplaced our folks and our households. At this level, we’re a bit fatalistic. So now … We simply observe,” she mentioned.
“Typically, whenever you meet a Ukrainian, they’ll overwhelm you. Our expertise is disturbing for others, and possibly so are our movies. Persons are uninterested in ‘dealing’ with our issues and that could be why our movies grow to be much less seen at festivals.”
Her “invincible” protagonists will not be giving up, nevertheless, heading to highschool even when it strikes underground.
“Once we heard about Kharkiv’s metro colleges, we instantly went there. These tales are actually taking place. It’s ironic, as a result of we have now all these massive shelters due to the Soviet Union and due to the Chilly Battle,” she mentioned.
Gornostai regarded for lecturers daring to actually tackle their nation’s scenario.
“The children already know. They’ll hear air raid sirens going off each night time. It will be arduous to cover the reality from them,” she famous. “Some lecturers and oldsters nonetheless attempt — they create this protected atmosphere inside their residence and when somebody visits, they don’t speak about politics. However then children go to highschool and there are new rituals, like that day by day minute of silence at 9 a.m.”
Additionally they get to listen to from those that skilled ongoing battle first-hand.
“After I was younger, we additionally had folks coming over, speaking in regards to the Second World Battle. It felt so far-off. Now, it’s not an aged veteran: it’s a younger lady and he or she’s been part of this contemporary battle. They take it significantly. Once they ask, ‘Have you ever seen demise?,’ it’s not a joke. Dying is part of their actuality.” However so is promenade and commencement.
“Russian invasion began proper after COVID-19 pandemic, which was so arduous for the children. They have been studying on-line, they couldn’t socialize. Then, a battle breaks out. Typically, faculty is the most secure place. They don’t seem to be working except they’ve shelters that may match all people and lecturers by no means ignore the air raids. I present the principal of a half-ruined faculty. As soon as it was allowed, he instantly opened it, as a result of children want it.”
They should “expertise issues collectively,” she harassed. However some can’t return.
“One in every of our protagonists has no faculty to return to anymore — her complete metropolis, Bakhmut, was utterly destroyed. She’s graduating on-line, along with her buddies scattered all around the nation and even overseas.”
Gornostai devoted the movie to her late brother.
“He died once we have been filming. He was actually, actually younger,” she mentioned.
“Early on, he determined he’ll pursue navy service. I used to be filming all these children and generally I might see his face. I used to be seeing him in a variety of these scenes, it was like I used to be hallucinating. He’s from this era and this era must dwell.”
She didn’t want to speak in regards to the battle along with her younger protagonists. In any case, they’re already residing it.
“There have been these women, and so they went to the river to movie TikToks and discuss. It has solely been per week for the reason that destruction of the Kakhovka Dam. It’s an ecological disaster: so many individuals have died, so many homes have been destroyed. However they didn’t convey it up: they talked in regards to the promenade, the exams, about going to college. They have been ready for his or her grown-up life to start. So I didn’t ask,” she recalled.
“I went to an artwork studio within the Kharkiv basement, run by this glorious trainer. I assumed youngsters’s drawings would replicate the battle. They did — initially. He mentioned: ‘Now, they wish to draw lovely issues of their lives.’ I used to be so joyful to listen to that. Possibly these drawings and TikToks, and dances, are precisely what we want proper now.”
“Timestamp” is produced by Olha Bregman, Natalia Libet and Victor Shevchenko for 2Brave Prods., and co-produced by Rinkel Movie & Docs, a_Bahn and Cinéphage Prods. Greatest Good friend Perpetually handles gross sales.

















































