I Worked for the Real Wizard of the Kremlin
Jude Law as Vladimir Putin and Paul Dano as Vadim Baranov, a fictional character modeled after the Russian president’s former chief of staff Vladislav Surkov, in Olivier Assayas’s The Wizard of the Kremlin.
In early-aughts Moscow, Vladislav Surkov educated me on the finer points of “pop propaganda.” Now he’s the inspiration for Olivier Assayas’s new film
By Andrew Ryvkin
Do you want to see Mother Russia? Not the export version—bears, nesting dolls, the Bolshoi—but the Russia of Rilke, Cap d’Antibes, and truffle risotto. The country where the only thing that matters is how close you are to the czar, and everything else—people, laws, even money—is simply an instrument for getting closer. In other words, do you want to see the Russia that existed for people like me—those who worked under Vladislav Surkov, the inspiration behind the protagonist in Olivier Assayas’s The Wizard of the Kremlin?
The film, based on the novel by Giuliano da Empoli, tells the story of Vadim Baranov (Paul Dano), a soft-spoken intellectual with READ ON
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