They are the ones who shot the "2step" video in Kyiv for @edsheeran.
A full-service production company based in Ukraine, Poland, and Georgia.
📹link: []
2/
Radioaktive Film collaborated with Lenovo, Apple, and Audi and made music videos for Florence + The Machine, Coldplay, Rag'n'Bone Man, Tame Impala, Years&Years, Mø, Foals, and ONUKA.
📹link: [] 3/
It is the first full-service film production company in Ukraine.
They directed and produced the Crystal Bear Award-winning film Stop Earth.
📹 trailer link: [] 4/
In their recent short video, ESSE Production House highlighted the necessity of donations to the Ukrainian army.
“If you are not afraid of the sound of apples falling into a box, you have never heard the war in your city.” 5/
Forefilms: @ForeFilms
The company is focused on producing independent author-driven films with a strong narrative approach, such as “Reflection” by Valentyn Vasyanovych, a film about a Ukrainian surgeon captured by the Russian military.
📹 trailer: [] 6/
Another film produced by Forefilms is “Homeward” by Nariman Aliev @narik_aliev, telling the story of the Crimean Tatar family trying to transport the body of their deceased older son from Kyiv to bury him in Crimea.
📹 trailer: [] 7/
The most recent film directed and produced by Forefilms is Antonio Lukich's "Luxembourg, Luxembourg", a tragicomedy about two twin brothers who travel to Luxembourg to find their father
📹 trailer: [] 8/
@Babylon13UA is an association of independent documentary filmmakers.
For example, in their short film "Fortress Mariupol. Orest," the head of the Azov Regiment's press service tells the story of surviving the Russian blockade of Mariupol
Full video: [] 9/
Tabor Production [taborproduction.com] makes films, documentaries, and social advertising.
Thus, their drama “Butterfly Vision,” by Maksym Nakonechnyi, tells the story of a Ukrainian servicewoman's life after Russian captivity.
Trailer link: [] 10/
"This Rain Will Never Stop” — created by Tabor Production and directed by Alina Gorlova is a documentary about Andriy Suleiman, who works with the victims of armed conflicts in Syria and Ukraine.
Trailer link: [] 11/
Recently, Tabor Production in collaboration with @residentadvisor, released the documentary "Ukraine: Nightlife in Resistance."
It is available to watch on YouTube: []
12/
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Kharkiv Oblast: a restaurant, a shop and office buildings have been damaged as a result of Russian night Shahed attack in Kharkiv.
Source: Kharkiv Oblast Police
Two women were wounded in Kurylivka, another two people were wounded in Vovchansk. A woman was killed in Monachinivka in Kupyansk district, her husband was wounded.
During its assault on Mariupol from Feb to May 2022, the Russian army used "scorched earth" tactics, trying to capture the city at any cost, in particular, by deliberately destroying critical infrastructure and residential buildings. 1/
Since the city is currently under full Russian occupation, there’s little information about the lives of the residents and the functioning of the infrastructure. Most reports are issued by occupation "authorities" to make and impression of the so-called "reconstruction." 2/
Before the Russian full-scale invasion, the population was ~430k. Now, there are ~90k residents left; over 70% are pensioners. Others either became IDPs, refugees, or have been killed.
📹: Destroyed buildings in Mariupol under the Russian occupation.
Source: Andrushenko Times 3/
On May 18, we commemorate the forcible deportation of Crimean Tatars from Crimea organised by the Soviet regime in 1944.
Over 180 000 people were deported between May 18 and 20, 1944🧵
The deportation began on May 18, at 3 am.
The NKVD personnel allowed people several minutes up to a maximum of half an hour to pack their belongings and sent them to the remote USSR regions without permission to return.
📷: The desolated Crimean Tatar village Üsküt, 1945: 2/
The majority of the deported ended up in Uzbekistan and the neighbouring Kazakhstan and Tajikistan regions.
In the first three years after the deportation, between 20 and 46% of all expelled died of exhaustion and diseases.
At the end of February 2014, during the Revolution of Dignity in Ukraine, armed Russian troops appeared in Crimea and quickly seized the peninsula. Read here how it happened and why this day, March 18, is marked as the day of annexation.🧵
On February 20, 2014, Russia launched a pre-planned military aggression against Ukraine
This began with the occupation of Crimea when unmarked vehicles and armed soldiers appeared on the peninsula.
📷: Soldiers with no insignia in Crimea, March 5, 2014. Source: Reuters 2/
Immediately, Russian special services and military officers began creating paramilitary units. In the meantime, in February 2014, pro-Russian rallies were organized in Crimea. On Feb 24, Russian armored personnel carriers completely blocked the entrances to Sevastopol. 3/
Animals suffer from fires, shelling, loss of owners, forced displacement, and, as a result, stress, fear, hunger, and unsanitary conditions. Animals die, get injured, or run away because of the war and cruelty of the invaders. This 🧵is based on the interviews with @UAnimalsENG
On February 24, 2022, the Russians launched five shells that hit Feldman Ecopark in Kharkiv Oblast, killing the shelter's residents.
Later, the invaders attacked the Yasnohorodka Family Ecopark in Kyiv Oblast. The attack killed some of the animals and injured many. 2/
The owner could not get to the animals to feed or safely evacuate them for more than 3 weeks due to the constant shelling.
In the shelter in Borodianka, one of the most affected by the war communities in Kyiv Oblast, animals were left unattended; only 150 of 485 dogs survived. 3/
On March 10, 1861, Taras Shevchenko, a great Ukrainian poet, writer, artist, and public and political figure, passed away. He remains one of the most famous Ukrainian personalities and is often called the "father of the Ukrainian people." 🧵
Monuments to Shevchenko can be found in America, China, and Brazil; in Ukraine, there are over 1,000 of them. Also, 9,472 streets in Ukraine, an asteroid, and a mountain peak in the Caucasus are named after Shevchenko.
📷: Monuments of Shevchenko in Kharkiv and Borodyanka 2/
Taras Shevchenko is a Ukrainian poet, artist, and political activist whose work and human rights advocacy catalyzed the spirit of freedom among the then-enslaved Ukrainian people. Shevchenko himself was born into a family of serfs. 3/