17th August

A chilling insight into life imprisonment in Russia's remote Northern reaches

17th August On a remote island in Northern Russia Boris is serving a life sentence for triple murder. He is one of the first to do so in post-Soviet Russia after the death penalty was abolished in 1993. This unsettling documentary brings us inside, not only Boris' dark, cold, claustrophobic cell but also the hidden recesses of his mind. For us it's just a picture, but on the other side of the lens Boris' mind has to deal with the reality that the squalid space offers against the infinity of his 'life' sentence.
"Should I go mad?" Boris asks himself as he lays a stool in the centre of his cell, "I haven't tried it in a while". He places his hands on the stool and holds himself up, but he strains and falls. "It's not easy to do handstands anymore," Boris mutters to himself. The only sounds are his heavy, erratic breathing and the creaking of the stool as he tries once more, "No, I can't manage handstands anymore". He puts the stool away. "You can tell I'm not 18 anymore but 35-36 soon".

"O Lord lead me out of the nets that were secretly set for me", is Boris' continual plea. In the cramped space of his cell Boris fears losing his mind. "The Count is changing", he remarks as we hear shrieking laughter in the distance, "he didn't do that before," he says as we watch him through the grill, pacing restlessly as ever, "I can't let that happen to me."

Yet Boris' mind must adjust to the surroundings. "Hey spider your lunch flew away", the spider on the wall has become his closest friend, "it flew away, I didn't catch it!" He whispers to it. In this world of endless repetition he can only look to the outside as an impetus for change. "The Public Prosecutor General was replaced and you immediately detect changes", he says, but day after day his routine, his food, his whole environment remains unchanged. His daughter is the only sign that time is passing "I haven't seen my little daughter and she will be eight soon." Yet even she exists only inside his mind.

Often his thoughts turn inward and focus on his plight. "O Lord! How many times did you warn me?" It is the world of these thoughts that Boris inhabits and through them he seems to find some kind of meaning. This tense documentary captures the inner workings of a deeply troubled soul but one that at least has learned to survive a life in moratorium.


Laurel Golden Conch - Best Documentary at the 11th International Mumbai Film Festival

Laurel Special Award at the Trieste Film Festival

Laurel Special Commendation - Prix Europa

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FULL SYNOPSIS

The Producers


Alexander Ilyich Gutman was born in Russia in 1945. In 1973 began his studies at the Moscow Institute of Cinematography. In the past 30 years he has worked on more than 50 documentary films (directing 13 of them) including 1244, 1245, 1246 (1994), Up to the Neck or Bodybuilding (1996) and The Sunny Side of the Road (2004). His films are internationally celebrated and have won countless awards; being recognised by such prestigious institutions as MoMa in New York and the Sundance Film Festival.He now also lectures at St Petersburg University of Cinema and TV, as well as lecturing internationally at institutions like the Sorbonne and the New York University Film School.

Making The Film


In my film "17th of August", like in a mirror, the realities of today's life in Russia are reflected. I saw daily crimes were committed and people in power were absolutely sure that God would forgive them. Today faith in God in Russia looks like a play on Communism. The whole country prays, but does not believe. It is a strange and horrible play that is without repentance. I made "17th of August" to illustrate this and in the film the prison where the character stays is a metaphor for contemporary Russia.

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