If the Ukrainian government, encouraging anti-Russian pushback wanted something to truly tick off Putin, they might re-purpose the great Sergei Eisenstein classic 1938 anti-German film Alexander Nevsky. Somebody here the other day mentioned the famous and disturbing Odessa Steps scene from Battleship Potyemkin, another Eisenstein classic. This director surely was a master of nationalistic and party propaganda. My thoughts immediately turned to the Alexander Nevsky heroic film, and so I watched it on youtube, first time in decades. It (perhaps with the omission of the Mongol scene at the beginning) appears ripe for a pretty easy flip to a Ukrainian hero, mostly dubbing in new dialog in Russian or Ukrainian depending on the audience targeted. The German Teutonic Knights as baddies are heavy on the Christian symbols, crosses on shields and helmets, a sinister and evil bishop blessing the German horde (note that his miter --- the bishop’s hat — has ornate swastikas on the forehead band, which I hadn’t noticed before. Subtle.) But just photoshop Putin’s head onto the German commander and the bishop, re-record Prokofiev’s magnificent choral music with pro-Ukrainian lyrics, and edit it down to half an hour. The battle on the ice is great cinema but perhaps to long at half an hour on its own (but be sure to include the enemy sinking into the lake when the ice breaks up).
I believe turning this incredibly effective piece of Soviet propaganda back on the Russians would be a stick in the eye of Putin and his henchlings.