ETV Bharat / sitara
టీజర్: ప్రతీ ఫోన్లో ఓ రహ్యసముంటుంది
దర్శకుడు తరుణ్ భాస్కర్ హీరోగా పరిచయమవుతున్న 'మీకు మాత్రమే చెప్తా' టీజర్ విడుదలైంది. ఈ సినిమాకు విజయ్ దేవరకొండ నిర్మాత కావడం విశేషం.
మీకు మాత్రమే చెప్తా టీజర్
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Published : Sep 6, 2019, 6:48 PM IST
| Updated : Sep 29, 2019, 4:25 PM IST
స్టార్హీరో విజయ్ దేవరకొండ నిర్మాతగా మారి తీస్తున్న తొలి సినిమా 'మీకు మాత్రమే చెప్తా'. 'పెళ్లి చూపులు'తో తనకు బ్రేక్ ఇచ్చిన దర్శకుడు తరుణ్ భాస్కర్ను.. ఈ చిత్రంతో కథానాయకుడిగా పరిచయం చేస్తున్నాడు. టీజర్ను శుక్రవారం విడుదల చేశారు. ఫోన్ గురించే మొత్తం ఉంటూ హాస్యభరిత సన్నివేశాలతో ప్రేక్షకుల్ని నవ్విస్తోంది.
"నీలాంటి వాళ్లు.. బ్రౌజరీ హిస్టరీ డిలీట్ చేస్తారు. కాల్ హిస్టరీ డిలీట్ చేస్తారు. వాట్సాప్ చాట్ డిలీట్ చేస్తారు. అన్ని దాచేసి దొరికిపోతే చీటింగ్ కాదంటారు","ప్లీజ్ నా గురించి తప్పుగా ఆలోచించొద్దు రా, బేసిగ్గా నేను మంచోడ్ని","పొగతాగడం, మద్యం సేవించడం, అబద్ధం ఆడటం ఆరోగ్యానికి హానికరం" అంటూ సాగే సంభాషణలు ఆలరిస్తున్నాయి.
ఇందులోని ఇతర పాత్రల్లో అనసూయ భరద్వాజ్, అభినవ్ గోమటం, పావని గంగిరెడ్డి, నవీన్ జార్జ్ థామస్, వాణి భోజన్ నటిస్తున్నారు. శివ కుమార్ సంగీతమందిస్తున్నాడు. షమీర్ సుల్తాన్ దర్శకుడిగా పరిచయమవుతున్నాడు.
ఇది చదవండి: వెంకటేశ్ నవ్వుల హంగామాకు 18 ఏళ్లు
స్టార్హీరో విజయ్ దేవరకొండ నిర్మాతగా మారి తీస్తున్న తొలి సినిమా 'మీకు మాత్రమే చెప్తా'. 'పెళ్లి చూపులు'తో తనకు బ్రేక్ ఇచ్చిన దర్శకుడు తరుణ్ భాస్కర్ను.. ఈ చిత్రంతో కథానాయకుడిగా పరిచయం చేస్తున్నాడు. టీజర్ను శుక్రవారం విడుదల చేశారు. ఫోన్ గురించే మొత్తం ఉంటూ హాస్యభరిత సన్నివేశాలతో ప్రేక్షకుల్ని నవ్విస్తోంది.
"నీలాంటి వాళ్లు.. బ్రౌజరీ హిస్టరీ డిలీట్ చేస్తారు. కాల్ హిస్టరీ డిలీట్ చేస్తారు. వాట్సాప్ చాట్ డిలీట్ చేస్తారు. అన్ని దాచేసి దొరికిపోతే చీటింగ్ కాదంటారు","ప్లీజ్ నా గురించి తప్పుగా ఆలోచించొద్దు రా, బేసిగ్గా నేను మంచోడ్ని","పొగతాగడం, మద్యం సేవించడం, అబద్ధం ఆడటం ఆరోగ్యానికి హానికరం" అంటూ సాగే సంభాషణలు ఆలరిస్తున్నాయి.
ఇందులోని ఇతర పాత్రల్లో అనసూయ భరద్వాజ్, అభినవ్ గోమటం, పావని గంగిరెడ్డి, నవీన్ జార్జ్ థామస్, వాణి భోజన్ నటిస్తున్నారు. శివ కుమార్ సంగీతమందిస్తున్నాడు. షమీర్ సుల్తాన్ దర్శకుడిగా పరిచయమవుతున్నాడు.
ఇది చదవండి: వెంకటేశ్ నవ్వుల హంగామాకు 18 ఏళ్లు
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 31 August 2019
1. Student activists and activists from the grass-roots protest group Bessrochka pose for a photo as they stage a sit in
2. Woman takes photo
3. Activists pass around water
4. Close of Bessrochka activist Emile Yunusov
5. Bessrochka activist Dmitry Ivanov doing a YouTube livestream, explaining that everything is calm and peaceful
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Ivanov, Bessrochka activist:
"Bessrochka is the union of people who consider themselves advocates of peaceful, non-violent protest. We don't have any leaders, we don't have a strict organisational structure."
7. Mid of activists
8. Close of Bessrochka activist Sofiya Kardash
9. Police arrive at the scene during interview with Ivanov, UPSOUND (Russian) Dmitry Ivanov, Bessrochka activist:
"Now the police have come but in general everything is ok, everything is peaceful. We aren't breaking any rules. People are just sitting. So the police will see (that) and they won't arrest anybody."
10. Riot police arriving and order the group to clear the square
11. Police arrest Bessrochka activist Maxim Kondratyev as he asks them to identify themselves
12. Police clear the square as activists walk away
13. Close of Bessrochka activists Olga Misik and Dmitry Ivanov asking police why they have arrested Kondratyev and cleared the square
14. Close of Misik
15. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Olga Misik, Bessrochka activist:
"It is constant activism that will influence other people to also get out onto the streets. The more we go out, the more chance we have of changing something."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 28 August 2019
16. Training session with two activists dressed as riot police confronting other activists
17. Close of participants, including Bessrochka activists
18. Wide of training session
19. Olga Misik gets 'arrested' in training session
20. Another participant gets arrested, UPSOUND (Russian) "Well done!"
21. Activists dressed in riot police gear
22. Group of Bessrochka activists simulating a scenario where they are held in detention, UPSOUND (Russian) Olga Misik, Bessrochka activist: "And what are you in here for?"
23. Various of lecture educating people on their civil rights and the detention procedure
24. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Alexander Archagov, psychologist and civil activist:
"We will try to do with you what they (riot police) try to do. We will inspect and search you. We'll put you in the police van and your task will be to listen to the (civil activist)."
25. Psychologist Alexander Archagov (left, in fake police gear) demonstrates what position to go into if forcibly arrested
26. Man in audience asking question
27. Close of Bessrochka activists Anna Loiko (left in grey shirt) and Emile Yunusov (right in orange shirt)
28. Various set up shots of political technology expert Sergey Sanovich
29. SOUNDBITE (English) Sergey Sanovich, political technology expert :
"It's very important to talk about technological tools. They are crucial for success. It's very important for companies who run them to protect their integrity from all sorts of interference attempted by the government. But the tools themselves wouldn't run a successful protest. What drives the protest is first the grievances that people have, and second, the ability of the people to organize a political structure on these grievances."
30. Cutaway of Sanovich
31. SOUNDBITE (English) Sergey Sanovich, political technology expert :
"It (messaging app Telegram) is not designed around collecting the largest number of likes or even check-ins or something like that. It is a tool for real people (for) offline interaction, more than some of the other platforms. So groups like Bessrochka – this is about effective coordination of offline action."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 31 August 2019
32. Wide of anti-government protest
33. Various of Bessrochka activist Sofiya Kardash using Telegram to communicate with other activists
34. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Sofiya Kardash, Bessrochka activist:
"(I post about on Telegram) Where I am, what I'm doing and why I'm here. I post photos and videos to say 'we are going here', where we are going, how many people have come."
35. Bessrochka activists using their phones
36. Bessrochka activist Anna Loiko chanting, UPSOUND (Russian) "Putin is a thief."
37. Various of Bessrochka activists marching, cars honking in support
38. Various of Bessrochka activists and other young protesters reacting as they see riot police approaching
39. Various of riot police arriving
40. Various of protesters running to avoid riot police
41. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Anton Omariev, Bessrochka activist:
"The police are standing there at the town hall. They've closed off the roads so they are not going here. Maybe we'll go there or we'll cross to the other side, and we'll go (forward)."
42. Bessrochka activists marching chanting (Russian) "Shame!"
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 24 August 2019
43. Various of pro-government "Russian Flag Day" rally
44. Various of Bessrochka activists being apprehended by plainclothes men reported by Russian media to be "Centre E" personnel
45. Various of Bessrochka activists being arrested
46. Close of Olga Misik in police van, UPSOUND (Russian) "Hi! Explain! Why did you arrest us?"
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 31 August 2019
47. Various of Artyom Abramov and other activists preparing before the protest
48. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Artyom Abramov, Bessrochka activist:
"Officially they (Centre E personnel) fight extremism, but in fact, they are political police. I have no other description other than that. They are special people who are trained to catch activists on the streets."
49. Various of protest
STORYLINE:
After a long Saturday spent marching through the streets of central Moscow protesting against Vladimir Putin's government, a group of young activists from the non-violent protest group, Bessrochka, are taking a well-needed break.
Some have gone to get water and snacks, others are participating in the group's livestream on YouTube. They're surprised that this protest didn't see a single arrest - in contrast to a long summer of demonstrations marked by police violence.
An interview with one of the group's activists, Dmitry Ivanov, is suddenly cut short when a group of riot police turn up and order the youngsters to clear the square.
"Now the police have come but in general everything is ok, everything is peaceful" Ivanov nervously said to the camera. "We aren't breaking any rules. People are just sitting. So the police will see (that) and they won't arrest anybody."
Ivanov is, unfortunately, mistaken.
After demanding a legal justification for clearing the square, one activist, Maxim Kondratyev, is roughly forced into a police car and carted off to the nearest station.
This is reality faced by many of these activists who have spent most of their free time this summer either in detention, waiting for their friends to be released from jail, or planning their next act of civil disobedience.
17-year-old Olga Misik is Bessrochka's best known member.
She became a face of the protests after a photo of her sitting cross-legged in front of a line of riot police, reading from a copy of the Russian constitution, went viral.
"It is constant activism that will influence other people to also get out onto the streets. The more we go out, the more chance we have of changing something," Misik said.
Some Bessrochka activists participated in a protest defence training session late August, organized by a group of human rights activists at the Sakharov Centre, a venue named in honour of the Soviet Union's most famous dissident, Andrei Sakharov.
A hundred or so people gathered to learn what to do if arrested, how to act in the police van, and the detention procedure.
The activists are so dedicated to the training that they use real riot police gear and scare tactics.
"We will try to do with you what they try to do. We will inspect and search you, we'll put you in the police van and your task will be to listen," said one of the organisers, psychologist and civil activist Alexander Archagov.
Bessrochka, which loosely translates in Russian as "Protest without end", is a small, leaderless group that first emerged last year after a handful of protestors refused to leave Moscow's Pushkin square following street protests against proposed pension reforms.
The group has now grown into a part-digital, part-direct action initiative with 50 to 100 active members, and several thousand subscribers on social media.
Despite the group's small numbers, however, their efforts to self-organize and educate new members - such as the protest training - marks a shift in civil consciousness previously unseen in Russia.
Technological innovation has enabled groups like Bessrochka to coordinate their actions more effectively.
To join Bessrochka, its website instructs users to join a "protest navigator" on the encrypted messaging-app Telegram, which directs new recruits to a hub of "chats" and automated "bots" which streamline communication.
Telegram is officially banned in Russia after creators refused to hand over its encryption keys to the authorities last year, and has become something of a resistance symbol among Russian internet users.
"(Telegram) is not designed around collecting the largest number of likes," said Sergey Sanovich, a disinformation scholar at Princeton.
"It is a tool for real people for offline interaction, more than some of the other platforms. So groups like Bessrochka – this is about effective coordination of offline action," he added.
Although regarded only as a marginal group, Bessrochka said it is under constant harassment from law enforcement and security services, revealing the Kremlin's jitters about any anti-government activity.
One of the agencies keeping tabs on the political opposition is Russia's shadowy Anti-Extremism Centre.
Known as "Centre E," it's a part of the Interior Ministry and was formed in 2008 to fight terrorists and extremist groups.
Prominent opposition activists said "Centre E" has openly harassed them since the anti-government protests of 2011, regularly monitoring them and trying to stop their activities.
Bessrochka activists said they know "Centre E" personnel by name and complained that its officers often tail the group's members from the moment they leave home.
"Officially they fight extremism, but in fact they are political police. I have no other description other than that they are special people who were trained to catch activists on the streets," explained one Bessrochka activist, 31-year-old Artyom Abramov.
Bessrochka is as vulnerable as any other group: their members are careful to take certain precautions.
Abramov, for example, steers clear of authorized rallies where he said there is a higher risk of arrest by "Centre E" officers.
More broadly, activists avoid any direct physical confrontation with the police at rallies and try to maintain anonymity on the internet.
Unlike at the anti-government demonstrations in 2011-12, the current protests and groups like Bessrochka are more concerned with legal procedures, defence tactics and self-organization.
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Last Updated : Sep 29, 2019, 4:25 PM IST