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About this informs Ukrainian Film Academy.
The future tape will receive 30,000 euros for production. Director Tetyana Khodakivska is working on the film “Blue Sweater with a Yellow Hole”. (“War Angels”, “Foxter and Max”, “Enticing, Sweet, Without Limits or Songs and Dances of Death”), and Olena Saulich became the producer (“Bobot”, “Little people”, “Babylon’13”). Production Pronto Film company.
Artist Alevtyna Kahiladze worked on the visual part. In particular, the artist created a poster for the tape.
What is the movie about? “Blue sweater with a yellow hole” will tell in real time about the influence of totalitarian propaganda on the minds of children. Through animated scenes, the real stories of children who passed through Russian “re-education camps” will come to life on the screen.
“10-year-old Kira, 14-year-old Taisa, 15-year-old Artem and more than 50 other children share their drawings and memories – about manipulation, isolation, punitive discipline and military drill. What, at first glance, looks like camp leisure turns into a deep drama of traumatized childhood.”the description says.
The World Cinema Fund is an initiative of the German Federal Cultural Foundation together with the Berlin International Film Festival. The fund supports the production and distribution of films from Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and other countries outside the European Union.

”, — write: www.pravda.com.ua

About this informs Ukrainian Film Academy.
The future tape will receive 30,000 euros for production. Director Tetyana Khodakivska is working on the film “Blue Sweater with a Yellow Hole”. (“War Angels”, “Foxter and Max”, “Enticing, Sweet, Without Limits or Songs and Dances of Death”), and Olena Saulich became the producer (“Bobot”, “Little people”, “Babylon’13”). Production Pronto Film company.
Artist Alevtyna Kahiladze worked on the visual part. In particular, the artist created a poster for the film.
What is the movie about? “Blue sweater with a yellow hole” will tell in real time about the influence of totalitarian propaganda on the minds of children. Through animated scenes, the real stories of children who passed through Russian “re-education camps” will come to life on the screen.
“10-year-old Kira, 14-year-old Taisa, 15-year-old Artem and more than 50 other children share their drawings and memories – about manipulation, isolation, punitive discipline and military drill. What, at first glance, looks like camp leisure turns into a deep drama of traumatized childhood.”the description says.
The World Cinema Fund is an initiative of the German Federal Cultural Foundation together with the Berlin International Film Festival. The fund supports the production and distribution of films from Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and other countries outside the European Union.
