2/ The Greek-Russian director Konstantin Charalampidis is making a propaganda movie called "Europe Day", set in Ukraine. It's being funded by the Internet Development Institute, which finances propaganda projects under the guise of "patriotic" Internet content.
The Russian film magazine 'Vsluh!' ('Aloud!') reports that the scene being filmed is set in Kyiv on 9 May, when the end of World War II is marked.
4/ As Vsluh! describes the scene:
"A young neo-Nazi man walks towards her and offers to remove the ribbon, to which the old woman replies that she is going to visit the grave of her husband, who gave his life for his motherland, in honour of 9 May.
But the young Nazi persists and says that today is no longer 9 May, but Europe Day, claiming that the [Ukrainian] authorities have renamed it. The grandmother replies that maybe for them it's Europe Day, but for her it's Victory Day forever."
9/ "Having received incontrovertible evidence that the film company ARTOS is shooting a patriotic movie and by no means advertising a "rainbow" demonstration, the law-enforcement bodies were by no means about to "close the case", but wanted to detain the representative of the film company indefinitely. And only the intervention of a lawyer was effective." /end