Kyiv filmmaker Mstyslav Chernov has released the first trailer for “2000 Meters to Andriivka,” a feature-length chronicle of Ukraine’s 2023 counter-offensive that will reach U.S. cinemas on 26 July before a Frontline broadcast in December. Dogwoof is handling international sales, with a U.K. theatrical bow set for 1 August and an on-stage Q&A in London two weeks earlier.
The film embeds Chernov and Associated Press videographer Alex Babenko with the army’s Third Assault Brigade as it inches through a mined, two-kilometre strip of forest to retake the devastated village of Andriivka near Bakhmut. “Outside Ukraine the counter-offensive was reported in numbers,” Chernov says in the trailer. “I wanted to show what those numbers really meant.”
Premiering at Sundance in January to a standing ovation and tears, the documentary has since collected the F:ACT investigative award at Copenhagen’s CPH:DOX and screened at Sheffield DocFest and Cannes’ “Ukraine Day.” A critic for The Guardian called it a “devastating, first-person view” of frontline combat.
Running 107 minutes, the picture mixes Chernov’s own footage with soldiers’ helmet-cam video, placing viewers inside a firefight where nearly every protagonist is later confirmed dead. Early reviews compare its trench-level imagery to fictional war epics yet note the absence of overt political messaging, focusing instead on the human price of a campaign that ultimately stalled.
“2000 Meters” is the second collaboration between Frontline and the AP after the Academy Award-winning “20 Days in Mariupol.” PBS Distribution says the new film is intended both for theatrical audiences and as a historical record before next winter’s elections in the United States and Ukraine. The team is also preparing educational materials for schools and veteran-support organisations ahead of the December television premiere.