You're reading: Ukrainian movie at Locarno Film Festival

It's the second time that Ukraine has made it to the lineup of international Locarno Film Festival in Switzerland.

A short 23-minute
film about life in the Chornobyl exclusion zone “Nuclear
Waste,” by Ukrainian director Myroslav Slaboshpytskyi, is among
those to be presented at Locarno’s Piazza Grande, the world’s
biggest outdoor cinema.
The last time a Ukrainian film was shown as
a part of the Locarno competition program was in August 2011,
although the movie was only partially Ukrainian, made in cooperation
with Russian and German filmmakers.

“Unfortunately
Ukraine is a rare guest at such festivals,” says Slaboshpytskyi.
“This film festival in Locarno is one of the world’s most
prestigious ones
after Berlin’s, Cannes and Venice’s
festivals.”

Slaboshpytskyi’s movie will be shown as a part
of Concorso Internationale shorts competition.

The film depicts the life and love of a man
and a woman in the exclusion zone around
the Chornobyl nuclear power plant, which exploded in 1986 and spewed
radiation detected for hundreds of miles. The action takes place in
a laundry plant, where one of the main characters works. The laundry
washes radioactive clothes of temporary workers who work in the
exclusive zone, the 30-kilometer radius around the closed nuclear
power plant that remains highly radioactive.

According to Slaboshpytskyi,
the movie depicts Chornobyl’s beauty in destruction. “Nuclear waste – are definitely people,” Slaboshpytskyi explains the name
of the movie. “In some way we all are radioactive waste,” he
says.

Kyiv Post staff writer Daryna Shevchenko can be reached at [email protected]