- Title: Kremlin critic wants film to open West's eyes about Putin's Russia
- Date: 2nd September 2019
- Summary: VENICE, ITALY (SEPTEMBER 1, 2019) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) DIRECTOR, ALEX GIBNEY, SAYING: "He looked up my films to see if I could be trusted and we had a good conversation. And he agreed to sit down which is not something that's really in his comfort zone. He is shy, he can be extremely reserved, he holds his cards extremely close to his vest so it took a bit of work to try to get him to open up."
- Embargoed: 16th September 2019 14:10
- Keywords: Citizen K movie Mikhail Khodorkovsky Vladimir Putin director Alex Gibney Venice Film Festival
- Location: VENICE, ITALY AND VARIOUS FILM LOCATIONS
- City: VENICE, ITALY AND VARIOUS FILM LOCATIONS
- Country: Italy
- Topics: Arts / Culture / Entertainment,Film
- Reuters ID: LVA009AUYSKEL
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky hopes a new documentary film about his life chronicling his journey from being Russia's richest man to an exiled dissident will open the West's eyes to the nature of modern Russia.
The film, "Citizen K," was made by Oscar-winning U.S. filmmaker Alex Gibney and premiered at the Venice Film festival this weekend. It was based on more than 24 hours of interviews that Khodorkovsky, who is now based in Britain, gave over a period of months.
It tells the story of Khodorkovsky's dramatic 2003 arrest on an icy Siberian runway by armed men and his fall from grace, punishment for what he and his supporters believe was his interest in Russian politics and fighting corruption.
The bespectacled tycoon, then head of the now defunct Yukos oil company, went on to serve a decade in jail on fraud charges he says were politically motivated before being freed in 2013 after President Vladimir Putin pardoned him.
Russia, which rejects his criticism as false, has issued an international arrest warrant for Khodorkovsky, accusing him of ordering at least one successful contract killing in the 1990s, something Khodorkovsky denies.
Putin has said he regards the former businessman as a common thief, while Russian authorities have moved to curb the activities of Open Russia, a pro-democracy movement founded by Khodorkovsky.
In "Citizen K," Khodorkovsky says he misread Putin when the former Soviet intelligence officer first came to power.
"It seemed to me ideologically that he was one of us. A person who gets it and wants to push Russia in the same direction that we want to. That is towards openness, towards democracy," said Khodorkovsky.
"Boy was I mistaken. He's a very talented KGB guy."
Despite living in Britain, Khodorkovsky said he "lived for Russia" and that it occupied his thoughts for 12 out of every 16 waking hours a day, adding that he and his supporters were acutely aware of the risks they ran.
(Production: Cristiano Corvino, Christian Levaux, Hanna Rantala) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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