Zoya (Russian: Зоя, other version of the title is The Passion of ZoyaRussian: Страсти о Зое or Russian: Страсти по Зое) is a 2020 Russian biographicalwar film directed by Maxim Brius and Leonid Plyaskin. The film is based on the life of Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya.
The film premiered on December 13, 2020 at the XXVIII Russian Film Festival "Window to Europe" in the town of Vyborg,[1] and the film was theatrically released in Russia on January 28, 2021, by KaroRental Film Distribution.[2]
Synopsis
On June 21, 1941, Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya dances at her graduation ball with her fiancé Zhenya and is planning to receive a higher education in literature. But the next morning war and widespread mobilization commences. Zhenya goes to the front and dies. Afterwards Zoya decides that she must also fight. In the fall of 1941, she becomes a reconnaissance fighter on the Western Front and a couple of days later she finds herself behind German lines. Then Joseph Stalin gives the order to destroy the lands occupied by the enemies, and Zoya is among those who can speak German well and is fearless enough to go into the very heart of the enemy army. After several successful forays, Zoya is captured and brutally tortured. When she is on the scaffold, she calls on the villagers not to be afraid of death and to kill the Nazis.
Cast
Anastasia Mishina as Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya[3][4][5]
Artyom Kuren as Aleksandr "Shura" Kosmodemyansky, Zoya's brother
Darya Jurgens as Lyubov Kosmodemyanskaya, Zoya and Shura's mother
Sergey Gamov as Alexander Poskrebyshev, Stalin's personal secretary
Yuri Utkin as Colonel Ludwig Rüderer
Yevgeny Sannikov as Chief Lieutenant Mark Rattenwy
Jean-Marc Birkholz as Commandant Dirk Sonenstrahl
Mindaugas Papinigis as Karl Beyerlein
Anastasiya Tyunina as Anya
Mikhail Arefyev as Ivan Kiryukhin
Vladimir Petrov as Fyodor Kuzmichev
Elena Shabad-Ozerova as Fedosya Solina
Production
Development
The idea of making a feature film about Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya was first voiced on November 27, 2016 by Russian Minister of Culture Vladimir Medinsky. He also suggested the tentative title of the future film - “The Passion of Zoya”.[6] The initiator for the creation of the film was the Russian Military Historical Society (RVIO).[3][4] On December 9, 2016, on the Day of Heroes of the Fatherland, it announced the first stage of the competition for creating a script.[7]
Work on the project began in 2017: Egor Konchalovsky was chosen to direct,[8] the script was written by Elizaveta Trusevich. At the same time, it was emphasized that the plot was built exclusively on documents and eyewitness accounts; there was no unreliable information, including various kinds of “war myths".[9]
The film is based on a script written by Andrei Nazarov and Leonid Plyaskin. Plyaskin became the director, and Maxim Brius later joined him. The production was carried out by the Gorky Film Studio (Moscow) with the participation of the Russian Military Historical Society (RVIO) and with the financial support of the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation,[3][4] which allocated 60 million rubles for the creation of the film. A collection of donations for the same purposes was opened on the RVIO website, and in total about 600 thousand rubles were collected.[10]
Casting
Actor Wolfgang Cerny who played Hauptmann Erich Sommer, initially refused the role since he did not wish to play a sadist. The part ended up being rewritten, with Sommer not being one of the torturers and instead seeing a like-minded spirit in Zoya and tries to save her.[11]
Filming
The first filming days of the film took place from February 10 to 13, 2019 in Belarus. Part of the filming took place in the village of Zabrodye, Vileika district, Minsk region, where with great difficulty it was possible to find village buildings preserved from the pre-war years.[3][4] On April 19, 2019, filming ended.[12] Initially, the film's release was planned to coincide with the 75th anniversary of the victory in the war (May 9, 2020), but due to the COVID-19 pandemic it had to be postponed.
Release
Theatrical
Zoya became the closing film of the XXVIII Russian Film Festival “Window to Europe” (December 7–13, 2020) in Vyborg. The premiere screening took place on December 13, 2020 at the Vyborg Palace cinema.[13][14][15][16]
The film was released in the Russian Federation on January 28, 2021. The distributor of the film was KaroRental.[17][18]
Reception
The film received mostly negative reviews from various outlets, including by Kommersant,[19] Literaturnaya Gazeta,[20] Nezavisimaya Gazeta,[21] Kino Mail.ru.[22] InterMedia published a positive review.[23] Among the common criticisms noted were the numerous historical inaccuracies in the film.