Intercepted (2024) : Film Screening & Discussion with film director Oksana Karpovych

March 4, 2025 | 2:30PM - 5:00PM
 | 
In-person
Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (CEES), Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine

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Location| RL 3-025 Theatre, Media Commons, Robarts Library, 3rd Floor | 130 St. George Street | Toronto, ON M5S 1A5
ABOUT THE FILM
 
Ukrainian intelligence services have intercepted thousands of phone calls that Russian soldiers made from the battlefield in Ukraine to their families and friends in Russia, painting a stark picture of the cruelty of war  with dizzying emotional tension. Juxtaposed with images of the destruction caused by the invasion and the day-to-day life of the Ukrainian people who resist and rebuild, the voices of the Russian soldiers - ranging from being filled with heroic illusions to complete disappointment and loss of reason, from looting to committing more horrible warcrimes, from propaganda to doubt and disillusionment - expose the whole scope of the dehumanizing power of war and imperialist nature of the Russian aggression.
 
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
 
Oksana Karpovych is a Ukrainian-Canadian filmmaker, writer and photographer born in Kyiv. She lives and works between Kyiv and Montreal. Her first feature documentary Don’t Worry, the Doors Will Open won the New Visions Award at RIDM in 2019 and received a special mention at Hot Docs 2020. In her personal projects, Karpovych explores the everyday life and oral histories of ordinary people and how state politics intrude into the private sphere, influencing the communities she intimately documents. Karpovych is a Cultural Studies graduate of the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy in Ukraine and a Film Production graduate
of Concordia University in Montreal.
Sponsor: Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine and the Centre for European and Eurasian Studies
Centre for European and Eurasian Studies (CEES), Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine
cees.events@utoronto.ca

Speakers

Oksana Karpovych
Oksana Karpovych

Ukrainian-Canadian filmmaker, writer and
photographer

Oksana Dudko

PhD Candidate, Department of History, Anne Tanenbaum Center for Jewish Studies, University of Toronto