INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Russian actor Yura Borisov missed out on a best supporting actor Oscar at Sundays Academy Awards however his function in the movie Anora
has catapulted him to celeb status back home.The 32-year-old star was little understood in Russia up until his role in the low-budget movie
protected him the very first Oscar nomination for a Russian actor considering that the end of the USSR.This success won appreciation both
from opposition supporters generally quick to criticise actors like Borisov who have not spoken up publicly versus Moscows military
offensive in Ukraine as well as those who back President Vladimir Putin.Borisov plays one of a gang of thugs worked with by a Russian
oligarch in Anora , which won five Oscars including best director and finest actress.But the Russian lost out in the best supporting star
category to Kieran Culkin in A Real Pain
Despite this, I cant remember such an orgy of affection, such an avalanche of universal interest, film critic Larisa Malyukova composed on
Telegram.An uncommon dissenting voice was filmmaker Nikita Mikhalkov, whose movie Burnt by the Sun won the Oscar for finest
foreign-language film in 1995
An impassioned backer of Putin, Mikhalkov criticised Anora for depicting Russians in a negative light
Whats this film about? A revolting oligarch, his disgusting better half, their sleazebag boy and an outlaw, he said at a youth online
forum, priced quote by Ostorozhno Novosti Telegram channel.But Malyukova said that despite Mikhalkovs words, people in Russia felt a sense
of delight over Borisovs election, lifting the cultural isolation the country has plunged into since its military intervention in Ukraine
People dont want us to be completely cut off
They desire the difficult, for a Russian name to be announced on the Dolby stereo in cinemas, to the entire world, she wrote
Yura Borisov did not win the Oscar however he won the main award the hearts of countless viewers, Russian film distributor Central
Partnership wrote on Telegram.Borisov made a huge splash at Cannes in 2021 when Compartment No
The Finnish film informed the story of an unlikely romance on a train in between a Finnish student and his character, a Russian miner.