A Oscar statuette belonging to Pavel Talankin, the Russian-born co-director of the Academy Award-winning documentary Mr. Nobody Against Putin, has been recovered in Frankfurt after a chaotic sequence at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport left the prize unaccounted for during an international flight.
Lufthansa confirmed Friday that the statuette was safe in its care in Frankfurt, Germany, and pledged to return it to Talankin as quickly as possible. “We sincerely regret the inconvenience caused and have apologised to the owner,” the airline said, adding that an internal review of the circumstances was ongoing. Talankin’s California-based representative confirmed the director had already arrived safely in Prague and was awaiting further updates from the airline.
The incident began Wednesday when Talankin attempted to board a Lufthansa flight to Frankfurt with the statuette as a carry-on item. A TSA agent stopped him and ruled the Oscar could be used as a weapon. A Lufthansa agent then offered to walk Talankin to the gate and hold the statuette personally for the duration of the flight, but TSA rejected that arrangement.
The airline also proposed storing the Oscar in the cockpit, and that too was overruled. With no checked baggage of his own, Talankin was left with no option but to hand it over. Lufthansa agents boxed, tagged and took the statuette away — and when the plane landed in Germany, it was gone.
Talankin told reporters he had flown more than a dozen times since winning the award in March with the Oscar in his carry-on bag and had never been stopped before. Co-director David Borenstein raised pointed questions in an Instagram post, asking whether Talankin — a non-native English speaker navigating the process without fluency — would have received the same treatment as a well-known actor.
The episode adds an almost surreal chapter to the story of a film that has already drawn extraordinary attention. Mr. Nobody Against Putin follows Talankin during his time as videographer at a primary school in Karabash, a mining town in the Chelyabinsk region, where he secretly documented the Kremlin’s push to embed pro-war ideology into classrooms following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
He fled Russia in 2024 under police surveillance, taking his footage with him. The film won the BAFTA and Oscar for Best Documentary, and a Russian court subsequently banned its distribution, labelling it extremist material, while the Ministry of Justice added Talankin to its register of foreign agents.
The documentary has also attracted criticism within Russian émigré communities, with some questioning the ethics of filming colleagues and children covertly and others suggesting the film presents Talankin in an overly heroic light. Talankin has brushed off the Russian government’s response, calling the ban an inadvertent advertisement for the film.





















































