Film Critics are called the ribbon "artistic triumph", noting its footage, which "impress with alarming intimacy. " "The resistance of evil should be uncompromising," says Slava Leontiev in the ribbon. The film reveals various forms of resistance: in the afternoon, Leontiev trains the Ukrainian military to fight the Russian invaders, and in his spare time with his wife Aney Stasenko engages in art.
It creates porcelain statuettes, and Anya skillfully paints them, giving details a special sophistication. "We use art to repel," Glory says, emphasizing the importance of preserving identity even in the war. The Deadline film critic focuses on Andrei Stefanov's operator's work, calling it extremely powerful, and notes the music of Dahabrah, which adds naturalistic and emotional depth. Criticism paid special attention to the innovative use of the POV camera.
"Frames from the war that demonstrate an accurate and sophisticated descent of a mini-bomb into Russian armored vehicles, impress the viewer with their uniqueness and anxiety at the same time," the reviewer notes. "Porcelain War" is a movie about Kharkiv in the first months of a full -scale invasion that shows how art and human stability become tools for resistance and preservation of humanity.
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