Skip to main content
The irrationality of war
RITA DI SANTO singles out that rare thing, a contemporary anti-war documentary, as the outstanding new film of the festival
COLLECTIVE MADNESS: The Invasion (2024)

SOMETIMES documentaries work better than fiction. This is certainly the case with Sergei Loznitsa’s new film, The Invasion. 

Loznista was born in Belarus, grew up in Ukraine and studied film in St Petersburg. He has been an almost constant presence for the last 20 years at the Cannes Festival, bringing both documentaries and fiction features. His latest, The Invasion, is a documentary filmed over the two years since the beginning of the conflict.

It starts with a tragic prologue: the funeral of four soldiers killed in the war. A church crowded with mourners makes the impact of war immediately vivid. Loznitsa then follows the daily life of Ukrainians trying to find food and water. Unexploded mines render some places dangerous, but life must go on. A couple is getting married; the bride wears the traditional white traditional dress while the groom is in combat fatigues. A lady tells the story of her husband, a soldier now a prisoner of war in Russia. 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
My Memory Is Full Of Ghosts, directed by Anas Zawahrti
Film / 5 November 2024
5 November 2024
In the first of a 2-part report RITA DI SANTO relishes the platform given to Palestinian stories at an independent Egyptian film festival
(L) The Brutalist, directed by Brady Corbet; (R) Youth Homec
Venice Film Festival 2024 / 9 September 2024
9 September 2024
RITA DI SANTO selects seven of the best films from this year’s line-up to watch for in cinemas
NO SHAME, NO JUDGEMENT: Nykiya Adams as the 12-year-old Bail
Cannes film festival 2024 / 26 May 2024
26 May 2024
RITA DI SANTO casts an eye over the winners - and the overlooked films - from this year’s festival
DREAMLIKE: a still from Francis Coppola's psychedelic depict
Cannes Festival 2024 / 21 May 2024
21 May 2024
RITA DI SANTO assesses the political reaction to Francis Coppola’s epic, self-funded depiction of the decline of the US empire