
A biopic with a built-in provocation, this French-Ukrainian-Hungarian co-production purports to tell the life story of Oxana Chatchko (Albina Korzh), one of the co-founders of the feminist organization Femen, which made headlines in the 00s by staging anti-sexist and anti-authoritarian demonstrations in Ukraine while topless. The controversy surrounding Oxana’s story is whether other members of Femen, specifically co-founder Inna Shevchenko, co-opted the organization for their own glorification when they took it to France and launched it as an international movement. According to the movie, as well as Oxana’s own words in a 2014 documentary about her, once Femen set up shop in Paris it became a “fashion brand.” For the most part, the movie, directed by Charléne Favier, adheres to this line of thought, though it goes about its explanation in a melodramatic way that the real Oxana likely would have taken issue with.
Oxana saw herself first as an artist, and a very accomplished one. Growing up in an orthodox household in Ukraine, she actually made money for her family, impoverished after the collapse of the Soviet Union, by selling icons she painted as a teenager. At university in Kyiv, she lost her religion and became politicized, mainly by the lot of women in the capital, many of whom could only get by as prostitutes. The creation of Femen with several other students was meant to protest Ukraine’s international status as a prime sex tourism destination, which many government officials were involved in. As Femen’s own reputation grew thanks to international coverage—bare breasts will attract media every time, they knew—their activities spread throughout Ukraine and spilled over into neighboring Belarus (where the local KGB kidnapped and threatened to rape and kill them) and even Moscow, where they specifically targeted Putin. During this time, Shevchenko, spooked by the authoritarian terror their demonstrations attracted, decamped to Paris with other Femen members while Oxana was left to rot in a Russian prison. Eventually, a French human rights lawyer negotiated her release and won her asylum in France, where she eventually gave up on Femen and concentrated solely on her art.
The movie’s structure splits the development into several timelines, but mainly switches back-and-forth between her sentimental education as an activist and one fateful day in Paris as she tries to convince a doubtful immigration officer of her refugee bona fides and prepares for a major exhibition of her work. The structural conceit only adds to the movie’s confused state of mind when it comes to Oxana’s personal demons versus her actual commitments, both of which are difficult to parse because she’s presented as such an emotional mess, something the documentary refuted. Based on the testimony of those who knew her intimately, she understood exactly what she wanted and what she believed in, which makes her fate that much more difficult to accept.
In Ukrainian, French & Russian. Opens May 22 in Tokyo at Human Trust Cinema Yurakucho (03-6259-8608), Human Trust Cinema Shibuya (03-5468-5551), Cinemart Shinjuku (03-5369-2831).
Oxana home page in Japanese
photo (c) 2024 – Rectangle Productions – 2.4.7. Films – Hero Squared – France 3 Cinema – Tabor Ltd.











