DAU. Degeneration

[6] Set between 1966 and 1968, the film portrays the final years of a secret Soviet scientific institute where boundary-pushing experiments in science and mysticism unravel into chaos.Following the incapacitation of Lev Landau, the institute's once-renowned chief scientist, the stern and authoritarian KGB general Vladimir Azhippo takes control as director.Despite these efforts, the institute remains a place of strange and unsettling activity, where experiments on animals, humans, and even infants seek to explore the limits of knowledge and creation.Amid the decaying institution, younger staff members rebel by embracing Western influences like rock and roll, but their dissent is swiftly met with punishment and conformity.What begins as intimidation escalates into a full-scale purge, as the neo-communist thugs wreak havoc on the institute, driven by racist, antisemitic, and homophobic ideologies.[14] Tablet magazine critic Vladislav Davidzon wrote that with the massive immersive theater project "Khrzhanovsky has built a testament to a great film that will never be—and could never be.
Filming in Kharkiv
The Institute set
Ilya KhrzhanovskyRussian filmDAU projectbiopicNobel PrizeSoviet scientistLev LandauTeodor CurrentzisinstallationRussia'sThe Daily TelegraphKharkivMaxim Martsinkevichimmersive art installationBerlin WallCentre PompidouThéâtre du ChâteletThéâtre de la VilleTabletVladislav DavidzonDAU. NatashaBerlin International Film FestivalDAU (project)Sight & SoundBritish Film InstituteThe GuardianThe New York Times