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    • Ukrainian/Soviet director, writer and filmmaker

      • Vladimir Nikitivich Shevchenko, born in Balta, Ukraine, was an Ukrainian/Soviet director, writer and filmmaker. He was a student at the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography, former VGIK, in Moscow, Russia. Shevchenko graduated as a film director in 1967. He soon became a prestigious and renowned documentary filmmaker.
      www.imdb.com/name/nm0792926/
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  2. Jul 21, 2019 · When Soviet filmmaker Vladimir Shevchenko took his camera onto the roof of Chernobyl’s reactor four in the aftermath of the fatal explosion, he had no idea he was right in the middle of what was ...

  3. Oct 26, 2020 · Three days after the explosion and meltdown of Chernobyl’s Nuclear Reactor Unit 4 on April 26, 1986, Soviet filmmaker Vladimir Shevchenko was granted permission to fly over the 30-square-kilometer site known as the Exclusion Zone.

  4. When Soviet filmmaker Vladimir Shevchenko took his camera onto the roof of Chernobyl's reactor four in the aftermath of the fatal explosion, he had no idea he was right in the middle of what...

  5. May 30, 1987 · A Soviet filmmaker who worked at the Chernobyl power plant within days of the nuclear accident there last year has died of radiation sickness, the weekly Nedelya reported today. Nedelya said...

  6. Vladimir Shevchenko is best known for his remarkable documentary of the nuclear meltdown and disaster - "Chernobyl - Chronicle of Difficult Weeks" (1986). As first film team on location, together with two other cameramen he filmed the immediate result of the disaster at the nuclear plant, block 4.

    • December 23, 1929
    • March 30, 1987
  7. Mar 14, 2011 · When Shevchenko showed him some of his photos, the father knew immediately that he was not going to survive. Some of the pictures were of the reactor itself. The film shows how haphazard the operation was and how many workers were never informed of the risks.

  8. Jun 25, 2019 · Shevchenko, who was working for Ukrainian TV at the time, was unaware of the dangers he was putting himself in. His most haunting footage is of the interior of the building that housed Chernobyl's Reactor 4. He realized later that the 35 mm film he'd been using had been contaminated by radioactive particles, which show up as spots on the screen.