‘My Undesirable Friends: Part I — Last Air in Moscow' Review: Julia Loktev's Piercing Chronicle of Russian Journalists Targeted by Their Own Government
A despotic leader reigning with absolute power. A crackdown on investigative reporters. A government consisting only of ardent loyalists. Federal agents with access to the bank records and personal information of private citizens. Journalists critical of the regime who are harassed, threatened and face possible legal action.
What country are we talking about here?
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If what happens in Julia Loktev's intimate and incisive 5 ½ hour documentary My Undesirable Friends sounds familiar, you may be surprised to learn that it's not, in fact, about the United States since the start of President Donald Trump's second term, but about Russia back in 2021.
It was then that Loktev followed several reporters in the months leading up to the invasion of Ukraine, chronicling the last vestiges of an anti-authoritarian resistance that fled when the war broke out. Highly informative and a bit exhausting, this in-depth look at journalism in a dying democracy warrants our attention — as long as you're willing to give it all 324 minutes of your time. It's especially worth sticking around to the finale to see how bad things can get, and what perhaps lies in store for America one day.
The full title of the movie is My Undesirable Friends: Part I — Last Air in Moscow, and it's the first half of a diptych that Loktev began shooting in December 2021. (The other half will premiere later this year.) Divided into five chronological chapters, the doc highlights a handful of investigative journos, all of them women, who were deemed 'foreign agents' under a law designed to crush any opposition against President Vladimir Putin.
Forced to comply with punishing regulations and facing the constant threat of arrest, we watch these brave young souls persist in their jobs until the bitter end. They continue writing articles, shooting and editing news segments, and releasing podcasts until the fateful day of February 24, 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine and their lives changed forever.
Loktev, who was born in St. Petersburg and grew up mostly in the U.S., accesses the group via her old friend Anna Nemzer (credited as co-director), a journalist hosting two shows on the independent news channel TV Rain. When the documentary begins, the network still operates freely in Russia but is subject to draconian guidelines, one requiring that a message be broadcast before each program stating that everything is lies spread by foreign agents.
Despite all the oppressive measures, Nemzer and the other dedicated reporters continue to work, often in clever and discerning ways that manage to make light of an awful situation. 'It's like a wake, but a fun one,' is how one of them describes the ambience. Nemzer is decidedly more blunt about their predicament: 'Everything happening now is the rape of justice,' she tells Loktev, explaining that sooner or later they will all be forced to 'choose between criminal prosecution and emigration.'
Filming their every outspoken thought and conversation whether in the newsroom, at home, on the street or in cars driving around frigid Moscow, the director channels the growing sense of dread as the government crackdown accelerates and the war nears. At times the movie feels so raw and unedited, it's as if Loktev dumped all her footage onto the table without shaping it into a definitive cut. Perhaps a leaner two-hour version would have yielded something more dynamic, though the point of My Undesirable Friends isn't to entertain us, but to capture every detail of a tiny democratic movement that was doomed to fail.
Alongside Nemzer, it's worth mentioning the names of the other reporters featured, because in one way or another they're all heroes: Ksenia Mironova, Sonya Groysman, Olga Churakova, Irina Dolinina, Aleysa Marokhovskaya and Elena Kostyuchenko.
Each of them struggles with their foreign agent status, hiring lawyers to represent them in kangaroo courts where the verdict has been pre-determined. At times they break down in tears, unable to deal with the constant harassment in their professional and personal lives. Their phones and homes are tapped, they receive threatening calls and texts, cars follow them around town and random accusations put them in jail. And of course they also face assassination, which has already happened to several journalists — as well as to opposition leaders like Boris Nemtsov, for whom they hold a vigil that leads to yet more arrests.
While Nemzer is the main character in the doc's early segments, we gradually shift to 'Ksyusha' Mironova in the latter sections. She's a young and fearless TV Rain reporter, as well as the fiancée of journalist Ivan Safronov, who was jailed over a year earlier and is awaiting sentencing. (He will eventually be sentenced to 22 years in prison.) When Russia invades Ukraine, it's clear that Mironova will have to flee along with her friends, leaving behind a loved one she may never get to see again.
The doc's engrossing final chapters, entitled 'The Expected Impossible' and 'Don't Say War,' reveal the sense of dread pervading the group as Russian troops amass at the Ukrainian border and war seems inevitable, even if some continue to hold out hope it won't happen. Then one night in February, Nemzer is driving through Moscow and notices fireworks exploding above the Kremlin. She knows all too well what this means: The last time that happened was when Russia invaded Crimea back in 2014.
Loktev, who previously directed a pair of subtly powerful indie thrillers, Day Night Day Night (2006) and The Loneliest Planet (2011), delivers a slow and sweeping real-world thriller whose aftershocks are still being felt today. Her insider's look at totalitarian Russia bears, at times, an unsettling resemblance to what we're now seeing emerge from the new administration of Trump, who has never hidden his admiration for despots like Putin — nor his hatred of journalists daring to criticize him.
Yet despite the sense that things will get worse, the women at the heart of My Undesirable Friends offer us a case study in resilience. Putting their own lives at risk, they combat the regime with intelligence, humor and lots of foul-mouthed Russian slang, until they're forced to pack their bags and bring the fight elsewhere. Their lucid, world-weary attitude is perhaps best summed up by a reporter's remark at one of the gang's many drunken gatherings before the fall: 'We've read books. We know what comes next.'
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'Our pricing is already pretty high compared to a normal T-shirt. So we're trying to juggle it all. And I think it's all been so volatile—just changing every day—that it hasn't really hit us in one way or another. It's almost kind of still up in the air for us.' Gay Pride Apparel's partners have been working closely with the company to minimize shipping costs and maintain open lines of communication. 'But the good thing is, our business partners and our suppliers have been really transparent with us and working with us,' Aragon said. 'There are different workarounds they're doing to help us avoid it.' When asked their thoughts on tomboyX's approach of including a clear note about tariffs, Gutierrez applauded the company's transparency. 'I love it,' Gutierrez said. 'I mean, as you mentioned earlier, we're very transparent with our customers, and I think it's because it's just us two. We engage in a two-way conversation with our customers and our community. So seeing tomboyX do that was really fun and felt like something we would do. We actually saw it and were like, 'Oh, should we consider doing something?' But we don't know how it's going to affect us yet.' Gutierrez and Aragon are considering what to do next and if tariffs really begin to impact the company negatively. While some companies are considering passing on increases, Gay Pride Apparel is also exploring an alternative. 'But as people are raising their prices and responding to this, we were talking about maybe lowering our prices and making less money per sale per product, but becoming more accessible,' Gutierrez said. 'Because truthfully, we're struggling. Everyone struggles. How do we meet our customers where they're at?' On a positive note as a queer-owned business, Gay Pride Apparel is seeing an increase in consumers supporting the company as an alternative to those that have changed their stances on support for Pride, diversity and inclusion, like Target and Walmart. 'They'll straight up call it out,' Gutierrez said. 'On Threads specifically, we'll get tagged randomly in posts that are like, whether it's a boycott post or it's a Pride-related kind of 'tag your favorite queer business.' And then people are like, 'Oh, I only shop at Gay Pride Apparel now because the rest of them are abandoning us,' or 'I only stick to companies that are here all year, such as Gay Pride Apparel.' They'll even say, 'I'm trying to support, even if it's 20% more, 30% more, to buy the shirt—I'll support Gay Pride Apparel over XYZ.'' While not a U.S.-based business, Canadian company GrrrlL Spells does a significant amount of business with consumers in the U.S. Last year, Grrrl Spells made headlines as one of the queer- and trans-owned businesses when their partnership with Target was drastically reduced and their labels were removed from remaining products. Creator and designer of GrrrlL Spells, En Tze Loh, shared their experience as a Canadian brand. 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Enamel pins, which are our most popular product, do not have any North American manufacturers at all, and they are mostly produced in China, so sadly, there isn't an alternative.' During a time that should see the company's biggest spikes, Grrrl Spells is preparing for a slower season. 'We are definitely anticipating a much quieter Pride month and year due to the tariffs and decline of the economy in general, as we've already been feeling the effects of it since the year began. We're trying our best to adapt to the changes and find alternatives in order to keep going, but it has been challenging.' Loh also wants consumers and LGBTQ+ people to know how grateful they are for their support. 'We would like to send so much love and strength to every queer and trans person during these wild times and thank you so much to everyone who has supported us throughout all these years,' Loh said. 'We need the support of each other more than ever right now. While we may not be able to ship many of our current goods to the U.S. at the moment, we're working on a new collection for Pride with items that we will be able to ship tariff-free, so please stay tuned!' This story was produced by News Is Out and reviewed and distributed by Stacker. RELATED CONTENT: Here's How Trump's Tariffs Are Putting A Damper On Black Protective Hairstyles