Hotsunlight (Russian: Солнцепёк, romanized: Solntsepyok) is a 2021 Russian propaganda war film directed by Maksim Brius and Mikhail Vasserbaum.[1][2] Set during the early stages of the War in Donbas, the film portrays the conflict in eastern Ukraine from a pro-Russian perspective and depicts the Wagner Group intervening on behalf of pro-Russian separatists.[3] Media reports stated that the film was financed by Russian businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin.[3]

Hotsunlight
Солнцепёк
Directed byMaksim Brius
Mikhail Vasserbaum
Written byVladimir Izmailov
Produced bySergey Shcheglov
StarringAlexander Bukharov
Marina Denisova
Gleb Borisov
Maksim Dakhnenko
Aleksei Kravchenko
Vladimir Ilyin
Release date
  • 11 August 2021 (2021-08-11)
Running time
133 min
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian

Plot

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Set in May and June 2014 in Luhansk Oblast, Ukraine, the film follows Vladislav Novozhilov, a veteran of the Soviet–Afghan War, as he attempts to evacuate his family from the conflict zone amid the outbreak of the war in Donbas. After becoming separated from them, he arrives in Luhansk, where his former comrade Pavel Gritsai, now a separatist commander, helps him secure work as an ambulance driver.

Throughout the film, Ukrainian forces are portrayed as indiscriminately shelling civilian areas in Luhansk Oblast. After Novozhilov's family and Gritsai's parents are killed in one such attack, Novozhilov joins the separatist forces. In the film's climax, Wagner Group fighters arrive and destroy a Ukrainian armored column before transferring the captured equipment to separatist fighters.

Cast

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  • Alexander Bukharov as Vladislav Novozhilov
  • Marina Denisova as Nina
  • Gleb Borisov as Ilya
  • Maksim Dakhnenko as Alexey Goncharenko
  • Aleksei Kravchenko as Pavel Gritsai
  • Vladimir Ilyin as David Gurevich
  • Svetlana Terentyeva as Olga
  • Andrey Terentyev as Zhenya
  • Gleb Temnov as "Seventh"
  • Sergey Garusov as "Pamir"
  • Alexey Rumyantsev as "Shmel"
  • Sergey Vorobyov as "Yenisey"
  • Gennady Yakovlev as "Shulga"
  • Vyacheslav Zemlyanoy as Sergey Grigoryevich, Gritsai's father
  • Nadezhda Shumilova as Vera Vasilyevna, Gritsai's mother
  • Yevgeny Kuzmin as Igor Burov
  • Yevgeny Yegorov as Grits Stepanchuk
  • Alexander Solonenko as Ukrainian General Glugovski

Production and release

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The building of the Simferopol Municipality served as the administration building

Filming took place in Yevpatoria and Simferopol in Crimea.[4] The building of the Simferopol Municipality was used as a filming location for scenes depicting an administrative building.[5]

The film was produced by Paritet-Film and Aurus.[2] Several media outlets reported that it was financed by Yevgeny Prigozhin, although his involvement was not officially acknowledged during production.[3]

Hotsunlight premiered in Saint Petersburg on 11 August 2021[6] and was later broadcast on Russian television channel NTV on 18 August 2021.

In April 2022, the Ministry of Culture of Kyrgyzstan banned screenings of Hotsunlight, along with the Russian films Donbass. Borderland [ru] and Opolchenochka [ru], citing the international situation and Kyrgyzstan's neutral position regarding the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[7]

Reception

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The film received mixed reviews in Russian media. Dmitry Sosnovsky of Rossiyskaya Gazeta praised the film as a "heart-rending" and unflinching depiction of war.[8] Maksim Voronov of Regnum positively reviewed the film's emotional intensity but criticized its ending as weak and disconnected from the rest of the narrative.[9]

Other commentators criticized the film as propaganda. Film critic Victor Matizen described it as an example of militarist propaganda and argued that it manipulated facts in order to portray Ukraine as solely responsible for the bloodshed in Donbas.[2] He also criticized the film's editing.[2] Writer and journalist Dmitry Bykov called the film a "monstrous fake" and "total falsehood".[10]

See also

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References

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  1. Dolgopolov, Greg (5 July 2022). "How Solntsepyok, a brutal 2021 propaganda film, primed Russians for war with Ukraine". The Conversation.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Matizen, Viktor (27 August 2021). "«А бабуську — топором». Виктор Матизен о пропагандистских приемах в фильме «Солнцепек»". The Insider.
  3. 1 2 3 "«Это такая шиза концентрированная. Луганская резня бензопилой»". Meduza. 12 August 2021.
  4. "Пригожин и «эпическое кино о вагнеровцах», снятое в Крыму". Krym.Realii. 18 August 2021.
  5. "В Симферополе снимают фильм о «событиях в 2014 году в Луганской области»". Krym.Realii. 22 May 2021.
  6. "В Петербурге состоялась премьера художественного фильма «Солнцепек»". Телеканал Санкт-Петербург. 2021-08-11. Retrieved 2026-04-11.
  7. "Власти Киргизии запретили показ трех российских фильмов о Донбассе". RBC. 24 April 2022.
  8. "Что в кино: «Солнцепёк», «Не дыши 2», «Главный герой», Аллен, Скорсезе". Rossiyskaya Gazeta. 13 August 2021.
  9. "«Солнцепек»: фильм о неоконченной войне". Regnum. 17 August 2021.
  10. "Один / Дмитрий Быков". Echo of Moscow. 19 August 2021.
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