War in Ukraine: Ukrainian cinemas, refuges to escape reality and air raids

In Ukraine, cinemas closed since the Russian invasion in February are beginning to reopen their rooms to the public, a popular refuge for residents to escape the reality of war but also air raids.

KINO42, in the center of kyiv, is among the twenty cinemas to have reopened in recent weeks out of the fifty in the Ukrainian capital. But it is the only establishment to offer moviegoers an anti-aircraft shelter: this cinema is underground.

The 42-seat hall, located four meters below street level, reopened in June displaying its program of films with the mention “cinema-abri”.

“It’s literally a cinema-shelter since it’s located in a basement,” Ilko Gladshtein, one of the programming managers, who has shown Ukrainian classics, told AFP.

The cinema, which opened for the first time in 2019, has always been underground but whereas until now it was only an unusual aspect of its architecture, it has now become its main attraction.

“KINO42 is the safest cinema in Kyiv right now. We don’t interrupt films during air raids,” he stresses.

This programming manager, and film producer, was surprised by the magnitude of the crowd in the evening for the films whose schedules were advanced in order to respect the curfew which begins at 11:00 p.m. local time.

“June is a tough month for distribution, but people are hungry for movies. There were three sessions for charity purposes and we were able to send some 1000 dollars to the Ukrainian army,” he says.

“It comforts us in the idea that we are not only entertaining people but also doing something important for the soldiers at the front,” he adds.

Unlike multiplexes that show big Hollywood releases, KINO42 has always given priority to Ukrainian cinema. And the preservation of the country’s cultural identity has taken on particular importance since the Russian invasion.

The cinema partnered with the Dovzhenko Center, the largest archive center in Ukraine, and increased the number of screenings from one to three per week, all of which were taken by storm.

Last week, KINO42 featured Weird, Weird and Fantastica series of animated shorts from the 1980s and 1990s: all tickets were sold out three days before the screening.

For Stanislav Bitioutsky, a 38-year-old researcher at the Dovzhenko Center, every social or political cataclysm has an impact on Ukrainian identity. “It happened for the first time during the Maidan revolution”, he believes, referring to the deadly clashes of 2014 between pro-European demonstrators and the security forces which resulted in the fall of the president pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych.

“Today, once again, we need to redefine our identity through art,” he says.

“Another Reality”

A little further down the street, the nearly century-old Zhovten cinema was one of the first to reopen in Kyiv.

During the reopening evening, the establishment, which has several rooms, broadcast to sold-out audiences in its 400-seat auditorium a classic dating from 1965, The shadows of forgotten ancestorsby Sergei Paradjanov.

“We wanted to support the country’s economy but also the psychological well-being of people,” said its director, Yulia Antipova, 46.

“Psychologists say that this kind of mental decompression, and the ability to escape to another reality, is extremely important.”

Here, air attacks are a constant threat.

Zhovten interrupts his films for 20 minutes when the sirens begin to wail and asks the audience to come to the nearest air-raid shelter.

If the alert lasts longer, the screening of the film is canceled and the public can return another day with the same ticket.

The return of moviegoers is gradual; ticket sales are about 30% of those before the war. Attendance drops each time a Russian missile hits a civilian area.

“But the human psyche is quite resilient regardless. In a few days, the crowd resumes, until the next attack,” says Yulia Antipova.

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