The post Hollywood Once Helped Win Russian Hearts And Minds. It Still Could. appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Hollywood’s boycott of Russia has turned out to be a boon for Kremlin propaganda and media control. AFP via Getty Images When Vladimir Putin’s government re-invaded neighboring Ukraine in February of 2022, it prompted a veritable exodus of Western companies and capital from Russia. By late 2023, nearly 10,000 firms with foreign affiliates or involvement had exited the country. Hollywood mostly went with them. Driven by moral outrage and worries about reputational risk, top conglomerates like Netflix suspended services and halted new projects and acquisitions in Russia, while all of America’s major movie studios paused film releases and distribution there. The effect on the Russian film industry was devastating. Only just recovering from a pandemic-era slowdown, it suddenly found itself isolated. Movies made by Universal, Warner Bros., Disney, Sony and Paramount “had previously accounted for up to 75% of the Russian box office,” noted one assessment. Without them, revenue constricted, theaters closed and staff were laid off. But if Hollywood’s departure hit Russia’s film industry hard, it proved to be a boon for Russian propaganda. Predictably, the void left by the absence of Western content was quickly filled by state-aligned media output. In mid-2022, the Kremlin created the Military-Patriotic Film Support Foundation (Voenkino), tasked with financing productions that promote heroism, national unity and loyalty to the armed forces. Thereafter, movies like 2023’s Witness (a Kremlin-endorsed film about the Ukraine conflict highlighting Ukrainian atrocities) and 2024’s Defenders of the Donbas (an ode to the Russian fight for eastern Ukraine) began to fill the country’s remaining screens. All this was part of a broader propaganda push on the part of the Kremlin. “The Ministry of Culture, the Cinema Fund, and the Internet Development Institute are 1758050721 the primary sources of funding for Russian cinema,” one 2024 analysis noted. Russia’s film industry, in… The post Hollywood Once Helped Win Russian Hearts And Minds. It Still Could. appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Hollywood’s boycott of Russia has turned out to be a boon for Kremlin propaganda and media control. AFP via Getty Images When Vladimir Putin’s government re-invaded neighboring Ukraine in February of 2022, it prompted a veritable exodus of Western companies and capital from Russia. By late 2023, nearly 10,000 firms with foreign affiliates or involvement had exited the country. Hollywood mostly went with them. Driven by moral outrage and worries about reputational risk, top conglomerates like Netflix suspended services and halted new projects and acquisitions in Russia, while all of America’s major movie studios paused film releases and distribution there. The effect on the Russian film industry was devastating. Only just recovering from a pandemic-era slowdown, it suddenly found itself isolated. Movies made by Universal, Warner Bros., Disney, Sony and Paramount “had previously accounted for up to 75% of the Russian box office,” noted one assessment. Without them, revenue constricted, theaters closed and staff were laid off. But if Hollywood’s departure hit Russia’s film industry hard, it proved to be a boon for Russian propaganda. Predictably, the void left by the absence of Western content was quickly filled by state-aligned media output. In mid-2022, the Kremlin created the Military-Patriotic Film Support Foundation (Voenkino), tasked with financing productions that promote heroism, national unity and loyalty to the armed forces. Thereafter, movies like 2023’s Witness (a Kremlin-endorsed film about the Ukraine conflict highlighting Ukrainian atrocities) and 2024’s Defenders of the Donbas (an ode to the Russian fight for eastern Ukraine) began to fill the country’s remaining screens. All this was part of a broader propaganda push on the part of the Kremlin. “The Ministry of Culture, the Cinema Fund, and the Internet Development Institute are 1758050721 the primary sources of funding for Russian cinema,” one 2024 analysis noted. Russia’s film industry, in…

Hollywood Once Helped Win Russian Hearts And Minds. It Still Could.

2025/09/17 03:25
4분 읽기
이 콘텐츠에 대한 의견이나 우려 사항이 있으시면 crypto.news@mexc.com으로 연락주시기 바랍니다

Hollywood’s boycott of Russia has turned out to be a boon for Kremlin propaganda and media control.

AFP via Getty Images

When Vladimir Putin’s government re-invaded neighboring Ukraine in February of 2022, it prompted a veritable exodus of Western companies and capital from Russia. By late 2023, nearly 10,000 firms with foreign affiliates or involvement had exited the country.

Hollywood mostly went with them. Driven by moral outrage and worries about reputational risk, top conglomerates like Netflix suspended services and halted new projects and acquisitions in Russia, while all of America’s major movie studios paused film releases and distribution there.

The effect on the Russian film industry was devastating. Only just recovering from a pandemic-era slowdown, it suddenly found itself isolated. Movies made by Universal, Warner Bros., Disney, Sony and Paramount “had previously accounted for up to 75% of the Russian box office,” noted one assessment. Without them, revenue constricted, theaters closed and staff were laid off.

But if Hollywood’s departure hit Russia’s film industry hard, it proved to be a boon for Russian propaganda. Predictably, the void left by the absence of Western content was quickly filled by state-aligned media output. In mid-2022, the Kremlin created the Military-Patriotic Film Support Foundation (Voenkino), tasked with financing productions that promote heroism, national unity and loyalty to the armed forces. Thereafter, movies like 2023’s Witness (a Kremlin-endorsed film about the Ukraine conflict highlighting Ukrainian atrocities) and 2024’s Defenders of the Donbas (an ode to the Russian fight for eastern Ukraine) began to fill the country’s remaining screens.

All this was part of a broader propaganda push on the part of the Kremlin. “The Ministry of Culture, the Cinema Fund, and the Internet Development Institute are 1758050721 the primary sources of funding for Russian cinema,” one 2024 analysis noted. Russia’s film industry, in other words, had been turned into a soft power tool by the Putin government.

At the same time, the Kremlin tightened its grip on what domestic audiences were allowed to see. By 2024, Russia’s rubber-stamp legislature had proposed expanding rules to block any film deemed to “discredit traditional Russian spiritual and moral values.” The result is a cultural marketplace where state-subsidized patriotism and officially approved morality crowd out dissenting voices.

Ironically, Hollywood’s boycott has helped reinforce this state of affairs. By vacating the Russian market, American studios have ceded its screens to Kremlin-funded producers and the state’s reinvigorated censorship apparatus. In other words, instead of undermining Putin’s government, the absence of Western blockbusters has made it easier for the Kremlin to monopolize the cultural space and weaponize it against the West.

It doesn’t have to be this way. During the decades of the Cold War, foreign cinema and Western pop culture played a crucial role behind the “Iron Curtain,” providing the Soviet Union’s captive population with a glimpse into the West – and showing them that life under communism wasn’t their only option. Though officially prohibited, Western movies, music and television circulated widely as contraband and highlighted themes like resistance to tyranny and the moral superiority of the West.

Their impact was immense. In his 1978 memoir To Build a Castle: My Life as a Dissenter, famed Soviet dissident Vladimir Bukovsky detailed the importance of such Western materials in sustaining the morale of opponents of communism and exposing the bankruptcy of Soviet ideology.

The same sort of role is still possible today, provided Russians are exposed once more to American media.

Admittedly, that’s now harder to do. Hollywood may still dominate the global marketplace with its blockbuster movies, but in terms of sheer output it is increasingly being outpaced by rivals with overt political agendas. Once responsible for a quarter of the world’s films, America now contributes barely a tenth. That shrinking market share has given authoritarians in places like Moscow more latitude to project their own “soft power” through cinema.

But Hollywood still retains massive global cachet, including in Russia if it decides to make its way back there. Of course, the Kremlin may seek to bar such a reentry. But given the ailing state of the national economy and persistent elite worries about domestic discontent, Putin’s government is liable to tread lightly. That, in turn, will give Hollywood the opening it needs to once again become a player in Russia. It will also provide it with the opportunity to help contest the Kremlin’s preferred narrative among the audience that matters most: the Russian people.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/ilanberman/2025/09/16/hollywood-once-helped-win-russian-hearts-and-minds-it-still-could/

시장 기회
Effect AI 로고
Effect AI 가격(EFFECT)
$0.002606
$0.002606$0.002606
-5.85%
USD
Effect AI (EFFECT) 실시간 가격 차트
면책 조항: 본 사이트에 재게시된 글들은 공개 플랫폼에서 가져온 것으로 정보 제공 목적으로만 제공됩니다. 이는 반드시 MEXC의 견해를 반영하는 것은 아닙니다. 모든 권리는 원저자에게 있습니다. 제3자의 권리를 침해하는 콘텐츠가 있다고 판단될 경우, crypto.news@mexc.com으로 연락하여 삭제 요청을 해주시기 바랍니다. MEXC는 콘텐츠의 정확성, 완전성 또는 시의적절성에 대해 어떠한 보증도 하지 않으며, 제공된 정보에 기반하여 취해진 어떠한 조치에 대해서도 책임을 지지 않습니다. 본 콘텐츠는 금융, 법률 또는 기타 전문적인 조언을 구성하지 않으며, MEXC의 추천이나 보증으로 간주되어서는 안 됩니다.

USD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APR

USD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APRUSD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APR

New users: stake for up to 600% APR. Limited time!