
Two Prosecutors
63rd New York Film Festival
September 26 - October 13, 2025
Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitsa’s (My Joy, NYFF48) tense and precise tale of the horrors of totalitarian bureaucracy centers on an idealistic prosecutor trying to expose the mistreatment of a dissident Bolshevik writer during Stalin’s regime.
The latest film from the great Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitsa (My Joy, NYFF48) is a scalpel-precise tale of the horrors of totalitarian bureaucracy. Adapting a novel by Soviet writer and political prisoner Georgy Demidov, set in the Soviet Union in 1937, Loznitsa follows the attempts of an idealistic government-appointed prosecutor (Alexander Kuznetsov) to expose the mistreatment of a dissident Bolshevik writer who has been jailed and tortured without evidence of wrongdoing. As he gradually comes to realize, the lack of cause for the man’s imprisonment is hardly unique under Stalin’s regime, and the neophyte lawyer may be putting himself in danger by exposing his own moral righteousness. Loznitsa constructs his story with a patient yet unmistakable sense of mounting dread, focusing on the devastating minutiae that allows fascism to function in our world. A Janus Films release.










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