Russia bans ‘Child 44’ serial killer movie

Russian moviegoers may remember Gary Oldman as the terrorist who hijacked Air Force One. They won’t get to see his new film because it’s just been banned.

The ministry of culture in Moscow has blocked distribution of Hollywood thriller “Child 44” for being “historically inaccurate.”

The Lionsgate movie is about a Soviet-era serial killer. Oldman plays General Mikhail Nesterov, an officer who tries to hunt down the killer.

It was due for worldwide release Friday but now won’t be seen in Russian theaters.

The ministry said the film, which also stars Tom Hardy and Noomi Rapace, distorts historical facts and events before, during and after World War II.

Russia is preparing to celebrate the anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany next month.

“The distribution of such films on the eve of the 70th anniversary of the Great Victory is unacceptable,” the ministry said.

Culture minister Vladimir Medinsky accused the filmmakers of depicting Russia as a “Mordor” — the evil realm of Tolkein’s “Lord of the Rings” — with “physically and mentally inferior subhumans.”

The film was due in hundreds of cinemas across Russia after premiering in London on Friday. Central Partnership, the Russian distributor, said the decision to withdraw the film was made jointly with the ministry of culture.

Based on a 2008 bestseller by Tom Rob Smith, the movie transposes a series of murders committed in the 1980s to famine-stricken Stalinist Russia. It shows the authorities trying to cover up the crimes to maintain the image of a perfect society.

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